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The Spinning World
A Global History of Cotton Textiles, 1200-1850
Edited by Giorgio Riello and Prasannan Parthasarathi
506 pages
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67 inc 8pp colour plates
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234x156mm
978-0-19-955944-2
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Hardback
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11 June 2009
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- The first global history of cotton textiles
- A major contribution to the developing field of global history
- Contributions by world specialists in the field
Cotton textiles were the first good to achieve a truly global reach. For many centuries muslins and calicoes from the Indian subcontinent were demanded in the trading worlds of the Indian Ocean and the eastern Mediterranean. After 1500, new circuits of exchange were developed. Of these, the early-modern European craze for Indian calicoes and the huge nineteenth-century export trade in Lancashire goods, and subsequent deindustrialization of the Indian subcontinent, are merely the best known. These episodes, although of great importance, far from exhaust the story of cotton. They are well known because of the enormous research energy that has been devoted to them, but
other important elements of cotton's long history are deserving of similar attention. The purpose of this collection of essays is to examine the history of cotton textiles at a global level over the period 1200-1850. This volume provides new answers to two questions: what is it about cotton that made it the paradigmatic first global commodity? And second, why did cotton industries in different parts of the world follow different paths of development? Included in this second question is, of course, the problem of the so-called 'great divergence' that suggests that Europe and Asia followed a common path of economic development until the end of the eighteenth century. Cotton textiles have been central in explaining the nature, timing and
effects of a 'divergence' in the nineteenth. A volume of this sort is timely for many reasons, not least of which is the growing interest in global history. Textiles remain one of the most important manufactured commodities in debates about economic, social and cultural change across the globe. By adopting a long historical view and a broad geographical viewpoint, this book wishes to avoid a Eurocentric perspective that has long dominated debates over the birth and rise of the cotton textiles industry in Europe. Empirically this book brings together, and adds to, the current state of knowledge on a number of questions related to the history of cotton textiles. The outlines of the cotton industry in medieval and early modern times, whether
in southern Europe, central Africa, west Asia or the Indian subcontinent, are known only in the sketchiest of terms. The relationship between cotton textiles and those made from other fibres such as wool, linen, and silk is poorly understood. And there has been a woeful neglect of the cloth made from the great mixtures of cotton and linen, cotton and wool, and cotton and silk, which were mainstays of textile manufacturing from Europe to Bengal. And the long history of commerce and connections between the producers and consumers of cotton textiles in Asia, Africa, the Americas and Europe remains under-researched. As a consequence, even the Indian trade in cotton textiles and the rise of the Lancashire cotton industry are not fully understood within their larger temporal and regional and
global contexts. The volume draws upon papers that were presented at a conference on "Cotton Textiles as a Global Industry" held in Padua, Italy, in November 2005 and a workshop on "Global Histories of Economic Development: Cotton Textiles and Other Global Industries in the Early Modern Period" held at the Fondation des Treilles, France, in March 2006. Both meetings were sponsored and organised by the Global Economic History Network of the London School of Economics and were held in preparation for Session 59 on "Cotton Textiles as a Global Industry" for the XIV International Economic History Association Congress held in Helsinki in late August 2006. Essays included in the volume are authored by 19 scholars from eight different nations,
all of whom are specialists in the study of textiles. They are drawn from a range of sub-disciplines within history and bring together their areas and periods of specialization to provide a global history. Therefore, the volume covers a wide variety of approaches to the study of history, which is essential for constructing a global picture. Some of the contributors are internationally well known for their publications on the history of cotton, as well as other textiles in different world areas. The volume also draws upon the research of a number of younger scholars whose work will form the core of the future development of textile history as a global discipline.Readership: Academics and students of economic and
global history.
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Edited by Giorgio Riello, Assistant Professor in Global History and Culture at the University of Warwick, and Prasannan Parthasarathi, Associate Professor of History at Boston College Contributors: William Clarence-Smith School of Oriental and African Studies, UK Robert DuPlessis Swarthmore College, USA Suraiya Faroqhi Ludwig Maximilians University, Germany Kayoko Fujita Osaka University, Japan Pat Hudson University of Cardiff, UK Colleen E. Kriger University of North Carolina, USA Beverly Lemire University of Alberta, Canada Pedro Machado
New York University, USA Maureen F. Mazzaoui University of Wisconsin, USA Patrick O'Brien London School of Economics, UK Prasannan Parthasarathi Boston College, USA Om Prakash University of Delhi, India Olivier Raveux CNRS - UMR TELEMME, France Giorgio Riello London School of Economics, UK John Styles University of Hertfordshire, UK Masayuki Tanimoto University of Osaka, Japan Marta Valentin Vicente Universtiy of Kansas, USA Ian C. Wendt Washington State University, USA Harriet Zurndorfer Leiden University, The Netherlands
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"A must-have for any academic library and a required resource for any textile historian." - The Textile Society "...a collection of essays of high factual value and close scrutiny of process, its revisionism lying in its world-ranging approach to a subject which has largely been viewed from a Western perspective." - Jane Jakeman, Times Literary Supplement "This comprehensive collection...offers a perspective unfamiliar to many historians working on the British industrial revolution period, but provides vital contextualisation." - Northern History.
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Giorgio Riello and Prasannan Parthasarathi: Introduction: Cotton Textiles in Global History
PART I. World Areas of Cotton Textile Manufacturing
1.: Prasannan Parthasarathi: Cotton Textiles in the Indian Subcontinent, 1200-1800
2.: Harriet T. Zurndorfer: The Resistant Fibre: Cotton Textiles in Imperial China
3.: Maureen Fennell Mazzaoui: The First European Cotton Industry: Italy and Germany, 1100-1800
4.: Suraiya Faroqhi: Ottoman Cotton Textiles: The Story of a Success that did not Last, 1500-1800
5.: Colleen E. Kriger: 'Guinea Cloth': Cotton Textiles in West Africa before and during the Atlantic Slave Trade
6.: William Gervase Clarence-Smith: The Production of Cotton Textiles in Early Modern Southeast Asia
PART II. Global Trade and Consumption of Cotton Textiles
7.: Om Prakash: Indian Textiles in the Indian Ocean in the Early Modern Period
8.: Pedro Machado: Awash in a Sea of Cloth: South Asian Merchants, Cloth and Consumption in the Indian Ocean, 1300-1800
9.: Kayoko Fujita: Japan Indianised: The Material Culture of Imported Textiles in Japan, 1550-1850
10.: Beverly Lemire: Revising the Historical Narrative: India, Europe and the Cotton Trade
11.: Robert S. DuPlessis: Cottons Consumption in the Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-Century North Atlantic
12.: Marta Valentin Vicente: Fashion, Race and Cotton Textiles in Colonial Spanish America
13.: Giorgio Riello: The Globalization of Cotton Textiles: Indian Cottons, Europe and the Atlantic World, 1600-1850
PART III. Cotton Revolutions and their Consequences in Europe and Asia
14.: Olivier Raveux: The Birth of a New European Industry: L'Indiennage in Seventeenth-Century Marseilles
15.: John Styles: What were Cottons for in the Industrial Revolution?
16.: Pat Hudson: The Limits of Wool and the Potential of Cotton in the Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Centuries
17.: Patrick O'Brien: The Geopolitics of a Global Industry: Eurasian Divergence and the Mechanisation of Cotton Textile Production in England
18.: Masayuki Tanimoto: Cotton and the Peasant Economy: A Foreign Fibre in Early Modern Japan
19.: Bozhong Li: Involution and Chinese Cotton Textile Production: Songjiang in the Late-Eighteenth and Early-Nineteenth Centuries
20.: Prasannan Parthasarathi and Ian Wendt: Decline in Three Keys: Indian Cotton Manufacturing from the Late Eighteenth Century
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The specification in this catalogue, including without limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations, and month of publication, was as accurate as possible at the time the catalogue was compiled. Occasionally, due to the nature of some contractual restrictions, we are unable to ship a specific product to a particular territory. Jacket images are provisional and liable to change before publication.
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