ABSTRACT
Early Modern Things supplies fresh and provocative insights into how objects – ordinary and extraordinary, secular and sacred, natural and man-made – came to define some of the key developments of the early modern world.
Now in its second edition, this book taps a rich vein of recent scholarship to explore a variety of approaches to the material culture of the early modern world (c. 1500–1800). Divided into seven parts, the book explores the ambiguity of things, representing things, making things, encountering things, empires of things, consuming things, and the power of things. This edition includes a new preface and three new essays on ‘encountering things’ to enrich the volume. These look at cabinets of curiosities, American pearls, and the material culture of West Central Africa. Spanning across the early modern world from Ming dynasty China and Tokugawa Japan to Siberia and Georgian England, from the Kingdom of the Kongo and the Ottoman Empire to the Caribbean and the Spanish Americas, the authors provide a generous set of examples in how to study the circulation, use, consumption, and, most fundamentally, the nature of things themselves.
Drawing on a broad range of disciplinary perspectives and lavishly illustrated, this updated edition of Early Modern Things is essential reading for all those interested in the early modern world and the history of material culture.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|73 pages
The ambiguity of things
part II|69 pages
Representing things
chapter 5|27 pages
‘Things seen and unseen’
chapter 6|19 pages
Costume and character in the Ottoman Empire
part III|54 pages
Making things
chapter 8|21 pages
Capricious demands
part IV|70 pages
Encountering things
chapter 11|22 pages
The taste of others1
part V|71 pages
Empires of things
chapter 13|22 pages
The world in a shilling
part VI|64 pages
Consuming things
chapter 16|24 pages
Porcelain for the poor
part VII|20 pages
Epilogue