In-Between Textiles, 1400-1800: Weaving Subjectivities and Encounters

In-Between Textiles, 1400-1800

Weaving Subjectivities and Encounters
 
Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
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Product details:

ISBN13:9789463729086
ISBN10:9463729089
Binding:Hardback
No. of pages:388 pages
Size:240x170 mm
Weight:958 g
Language:English
Illustrations: 88 Illustrations, color
620
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Long description:
In-Between Textiles is a decentred study of how textiles shaped, disrupted, and transformed subjectivities in the age of the first globalisation. The volume presents a radically cross-disciplinary approach that brings together world-leading anthropologists, archaeologists, art historians, conservators, curators, historians, scientists, and weavers to reflect on the power of textiles to reshape increasingly contested identities on a global scale between 1400 and 1800. Contributors posit the concept of ?in-between textiles,? building upon Homi Bhabha?s notion of in-betweenness as the actual material ground of the negotiation of cultural practices and meanings; a site identified as the battleground over strategies of selfhood and the production of identity signs troubled by colonialism and consumerism across the world. In-Between Textiles establishes cutting-edge conversations between textile studies, critical cultural theory, and material culture studies to examine how textiles created and challenged experiences of subjectivity, relatedness, and dis/location that transformed social fabrics around the globe.

?At a time when the fabric of democracy is rent by xenophobic zealotry, this outstanding volume provides us with the warp and woof of historical exchange and cultural co-existence. These enthralling essays engage with material practices of weaving across genres and geographies, displaying the travelling world of textiles as they record the shifting global communities of a ?woven imaginary.? Reading In-Between Textiles, brought to life the migratory memory of my mother?s Parsi garas: a traditional sari, commissioned in Bombay from Chinese sailors who offered her a range of silks and motifs, and brought her the sari, months later, when they docked again in Bombay harbor. Set out on this wondrous voyage of the woven world.?
Homi K. Bhabha, Harvard University.

?Ranging across five centuries, six continents, and an impressive range of fields, from chemistry-based technologies to ethnographic fieldwork, this broad collection of textile studies recovers the place of subalterns in history, and the varying meanings that early modern textiles took on depending on the communities that used them. Employing the concept of ?in-betweenness,? this volume includes the agency of the excluded and allows historians to move away from glorifying metropolitan ?culture? without a clear consciousness that it is a culture of imperialism.?
Suraiya Faroqhi, Ibn Haldun University.

?What happens when a material methodology is used to investigate subjectivities? This remarkable collection of sixteen essays considers the ways in which textiles and clothing serve to unlock the space ?in-between,? one of negotiation, translation, and sometimes subversion of identities. In this book early modern cloth, but also dress, embroideries, and carpets are interrogated to create a new conceptualization of the global. Here material exchange, cultural connections, and the encounters of ideas are woven together in a rich tapestry traversing the entire world.?
Giorgio Riello, European University Institute Florence.

?This pioneering volume offers sixteen case studies that consistently cross-fertilize Homi Bhabha?s postcolonial theory with the new history of material practices to show how dress and textiles produced difference and mimicry in cultural struggles that remade subjectivities in the early modern world. A remarkable feat and excellent read. Beautifully illustrated, incisive, and original, this book presents cutting-edge scholarship.?
Ulinka Rublack, University of Cambridge.
Table of Contents:
Contents
List of Contributors
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements
1 Subjectivities In-Between Early Modern Global Textiles (Beatriz Marín-Aguilera (University of Liverpool), Stefan Hanß (University of Manchester))
Part I: Unhomeliness, Mimicry, and Mockery
2 Maori Textiles and Culture: Adaptation, Transformation, and Manifestation in Early Aotearoa (Catherine Smith (University of Otago))
3 Contesting Images: The Archaeology of Early Modern Textiles, Clothing and Closures from Puritan New England (Diana DiPaolo Loren (Peabody Museum, Harvard University))
4 ?A Few Shreds of Rough Linen? and ?a Certain Degree of Elegance?: Enslaved Textile-Makings in Colonial Brazil and the Caribbean (Robert S. DuPlessis (Swarthmore College))
Part II: The Material Enunciation of Difference
5 Textiles, Fashion, and Questions of Whiteness: Racial Politics and Material Culture in the British World, c.1660?1820 (Beverly Lemire (University of Alberta))
6 Abolitionism and Kente Cloth: Early Modern West African Textiles in Thomas Clarkson?s Chest (Malika Kraamer (MARKK Hamburg))
7 Dressing in the Deccan: Clothing and Identity at the Courts of Central India, 1550?1700 (Marika Sardar (Independent Scholar)
8 ?Rags of Popery?: Dressing and Addressing the Material Culture of Disrupted Faith in Early Modern England (Mary Brooks (Durham University))
Part III: Identity Effects In-Between the Local and the Global
9 Globalizing Iberian Moorishness: Japanese Visitors, Chinese Textiles, and Imperial Cultural Identity (Javier Irigoyen-García (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign))
10 Tornasol Techniques as Cultural Memory: Andean Colonial Practices of Weaving Shimmering Cloth, and Their Regional Forebears (Denise Y. Arnold (University College London and Instituto de Lengua y Cultura Aymara, La Paz))
11 In Between the Global and the Local: Silk in Seventeenth- and Early Eighteenth-Century Russia (Victoria Ivleva (Durham University))
12 African Cotton: Cultural and Economic Resistance in Mozambique in the Mid-Eighteenth Century (Luís Frederico Dias Antunes (University of Lisbon))
Part IV: Material Translation and Cultural Appropriation
13 Mediating Mediterranean Cultures: Silk Embroidery and the Design of the Self in Early Modern Algiers (Leyla Belka?d-Neri (Institut Français de la Mode))
14 The Material Translation of Persian and Indian Carpets and Textiles in Early Modern Japan (Yumiko Kamada (Keio University))
15 Globalisation and the Manufacture of Tablet-Woven Sanctuary Curtains in Ethiopia in the Eighteenth Century (Michael Gervers (University of Toronto) and Claire Gérentet de Saluneaux (Lyon))
16 Cochineal and the Changing Patterns of Consumption of Red Dyes in Early Modern European Textile Industries (Ana Serrano (University of Amsterdam))
Archives, Libraries, and Museums (Abbreviations)
Select Bibliography
Index