
Threads of Global Desire
Silk in the Pre-Modern World
Boydell Press
Published on 18. May 2018
Book
Hardback
447 pages
978-1-78327-293-8 (ISBN)
Description
Considering silk as a major force of cross-cultural interaction, this book examines the integration of silk production and consumption into various cultures in the pre-modern world.
Silk has long been a global commodity that, because of its exceptional qualities, high value and relative portability, came to be traded over very long distances. Similarly, the silk industry - from sericulture to the weaving of cloth - was one of the most important fields of production in the medieval and early modern world. The production and consumption of silks spread from China to Japan and Korea and travelled westward as far as India, Persia and theByzantine Empire, Europe, Africa and the Americas. As contributors to this book demonstrate, in this process of diffusion silk fostered technological innovation and allowed new forms of organization of labour to emerge. Its consumption constantly reshaped social hierarchies, gender roles, aesthetic and visual cultures,as well as rituals and representations of power.
Threads of Global Desire is the first attempt at considering a global history of silk in the pre-modern era. The book examines the role of silk production and use in various cultures and its relation to everyday and regulatory practices. It considers silk as a major force of cross cultural interaction through technological exchange and trade in finished and semi-finished goods. Silks mediated design and a taste for luxuries and were part of gifting practices in diplomatic and private contexts. Silk manufacturing also fostered thecirculation of skilled craftsmen, connecting different centres and regions across continents and linking the countryside to urban production.
DAGMAR SCHAEFER is Director of Department 3 'Artefacts, Action, and Knowledge'at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science in Berlin and Professor h.c. of the History of Technology at the Technical University, Berlin.
GIORGIO RIELLO is Professor of Global History and Culture at the University of Warwick. He has published extensively on the history of material culture and trade in early modern Europe and Asia and in particular on textiles and fashion.
LUCA MOLA is Professor of Early Modern Europe: History of the Renaissance and the Mediterranean in a World Perspective at the European University Institute in Fiesole.
Contributors: JOSE L. GASCH-TOMAS, SURAIYA FAROQHI, KAROLINA HUTKOVA, FUJITA KAYOKO, BEN MARSH, RUDOLPHMATTHEE, LESLEY ELLIS MILLER, DAVID MITCHELL, LUCA MOLA, LISA MONNAS, AMANDA PHILLIPS, GIORGIO RIELLO, DAGMAR SCHAEFER, ANGELA SHENG
Silk has long been a global commodity that, because of its exceptional qualities, high value and relative portability, came to be traded over very long distances. Similarly, the silk industry - from sericulture to the weaving of cloth - was one of the most important fields of production in the medieval and early modern world. The production and consumption of silks spread from China to Japan and Korea and travelled westward as far as India, Persia and theByzantine Empire, Europe, Africa and the Americas. As contributors to this book demonstrate, in this process of diffusion silk fostered technological innovation and allowed new forms of organization of labour to emerge. Its consumption constantly reshaped social hierarchies, gender roles, aesthetic and visual cultures,as well as rituals and representations of power.
Threads of Global Desire is the first attempt at considering a global history of silk in the pre-modern era. The book examines the role of silk production and use in various cultures and its relation to everyday and regulatory practices. It considers silk as a major force of cross cultural interaction through technological exchange and trade in finished and semi-finished goods. Silks mediated design and a taste for luxuries and were part of gifting practices in diplomatic and private contexts. Silk manufacturing also fostered thecirculation of skilled craftsmen, connecting different centres and regions across continents and linking the countryside to urban production.
DAGMAR SCHAEFER is Director of Department 3 'Artefacts, Action, and Knowledge'at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science in Berlin and Professor h.c. of the History of Technology at the Technical University, Berlin.
GIORGIO RIELLO is Professor of Global History and Culture at the University of Warwick. He has published extensively on the history of material culture and trade in early modern Europe and Asia and in particular on textiles and fashion.
LUCA MOLA is Professor of Early Modern Europe: History of the Renaissance and the Mediterranean in a World Perspective at the European University Institute in Fiesole.
Contributors: JOSE L. GASCH-TOMAS, SURAIYA FAROQHI, KAROLINA HUTKOVA, FUJITA KAYOKO, BEN MARSH, RUDOLPHMATTHEE, LESLEY ELLIS MILLER, DAVID MITCHELL, LUCA MOLA, LISA MONNAS, AMANDA PHILLIPS, GIORGIO RIELLO, DAGMAR SCHAEFER, ANGELA SHENG
Reviews / Votes
Erudite...fascinating [and] well worth reading...as an exercise in comparative history and material culture. * ANGLICAN AND EPISCOPAL REVIEW * Recommended. * CHOICE *More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Woodbridge
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Boydell & Brewer Ltd
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
Cloth over boards
Illustrations
25 farbige Abbildungen, 61 s/w Abbildungen, 3 s/w Zeichnungen
25 colour, 50 b/w, 9 line illus.
Dimensions
Height: 240 mm
Width: 161 mm
Thickness: 29 mm
Weight
834 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-78327-293-8 (9781783272938)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Dagmar Schäfer, Giorgio Riello, Luca Molà
Editor
Contributor
Contributions
Contributor
Contributor
Contributor
Author
Contributor
Content
Introduction: Silk in the Pre- Modern World - Luca Mola and Giorgio Riello and Dagmar Schaefer
Power and Silk: The Central State and Localities in State-owned Manufacture during the Ming Reign (1368-1644), - Dagmar Schaefer
Why Velvet? Localised Textile Innovation in Ming China, - Angela Sheng
The Dutch East India Company and Asian Raw Silk: From Iran to Bengal via China and Vietnam - Rudi Matthee
The Localisation of the Global: Ottoman Silk Textiles and Markets, 1500-1790 - Amanda Phillips
Ottoman Silks and their Markets at the Borders of the Empire, c. 1500-1800 - Suraiya Faroqhi
A Study in Contrasts: Silk Consumption in Italy and England during the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries - Lisa Monnas
What d'ye lack Ladies? Hoods, Ribbands, very fine silk stockings: The Silk Trades in Restoration London - David M. Mitchell
From Design Studio to Marketplace: Products, Agents and Methods of Distribution in the Lyons Silk Manufactures, 1660-1789 - Lesley Ellis Miller
The Manila Galleon and the Reception of Chinese Silk in New Spain, c. 1550-1650 - Jose L. Gasch-Tomas
'The Honour of the Thing': Silk Culture in Eighteenth-Century Pennsylvania - Ben Marsh
A Global Transfer of Silk Reeling Technologies: The English East India Company and the Bengal Silk Industry -
Changing Silk Culture in Early Modern Japan: On Foreign Trade and the Development of 'National' Fashion, from the Sixteenth to Nineteenth Century - Fujita Kayoko
Textile Spheres: Silk in a Global and Comparative Context - Giorgio Riello
Glossary
Bibliography
Notes on Contributors
Index
Power and Silk: The Central State and Localities in State-owned Manufacture during the Ming Reign (1368-1644), - Dagmar Schaefer
Why Velvet? Localised Textile Innovation in Ming China, - Angela Sheng
The Dutch East India Company and Asian Raw Silk: From Iran to Bengal via China and Vietnam - Rudi Matthee
The Localisation of the Global: Ottoman Silk Textiles and Markets, 1500-1790 - Amanda Phillips
Ottoman Silks and their Markets at the Borders of the Empire, c. 1500-1800 - Suraiya Faroqhi
A Study in Contrasts: Silk Consumption in Italy and England during the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries - Lisa Monnas
What d'ye lack Ladies? Hoods, Ribbands, very fine silk stockings: The Silk Trades in Restoration London - David M. Mitchell
From Design Studio to Marketplace: Products, Agents and Methods of Distribution in the Lyons Silk Manufactures, 1660-1789 - Lesley Ellis Miller
The Manila Galleon and the Reception of Chinese Silk in New Spain, c. 1550-1650 - Jose L. Gasch-Tomas
'The Honour of the Thing': Silk Culture in Eighteenth-Century Pennsylvania - Ben Marsh
A Global Transfer of Silk Reeling Technologies: The English East India Company and the Bengal Silk Industry -
Changing Silk Culture in Early Modern Japan: On Foreign Trade and the Development of 'National' Fashion, from the Sixteenth to Nineteenth Century - Fujita Kayoko
Textile Spheres: Silk in a Global and Comparative Context - Giorgio Riello
Glossary
Bibliography
Notes on Contributors
Index