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.

chapter |25 pages

Introduction

Early modern things: objects in motion, 1500–1800

part I|73 pages

The ambiguity of things

chapter 1|22 pages

Surface tension

Objectifying ginseng in Chinese early modernity

chapter 2|31 pages

Going to the birds

Animals as things and beings in early modernity

chapter 3|18 pages

The restless clock

part II|69 pages

Representing things

chapter 4|21 pages

Stil-Staende Dingen

Picturing objects in the Dutch Golden Age

chapter 5|27 pages

‘Things seen and unseen’

The material culture of early modern inventories and their representation of domestic interiors

chapter 6|19 pages

Costume and character in the Ottoman Empire

Dress as social agent in Nicolay’s Navigations

part III|54 pages

Making things

chapter 7|31 pages

Making things

Techniques and books in early modern Europe

chapter 8|21 pages

Capricious demands

Artisanal goods, business strategies, and consumer behavior in seventeenth-century Florence

part IV|70 pages

Encountering things

chapter 9|28 pages

Catalogical encounters

Worldmaking in early modern cabinets of curiosities

chapter 10|18 pages

Unruly objects

Baroque fantasies and early modern realities

chapter 11|22 pages

The taste of others1

Finery, the slave trade, and Africa’s place in the traffic in early modern things

part V|71 pages

Empires of things

chapter 12|26 pages

Locating rhubarb

Early modernity’s relevant obscurity

chapter 13|22 pages

The world in a shilling

Silver coins and the challenge of political economy in the early modern Atlantic world

chapter 14|21 pages

Anatolian timber and Egyptian grain

Things that made the Ottoman Empire

part VI|64 pages

Consuming things

chapter 15|19 pages

The Tokugawa storehouse

Ieyasu’s encounters with things

chapter 16|24 pages

Porcelain for the poor

The material culture of tea and coffee consumption in eighteenth-century Amsterdam

chapter 17|19 pages

Fashioning difference in Georgian England

Furniture for him and for her

part VII|20 pages

Epilogue

chapter 18|6 pages

Denaturalizing things

A comment

chapter 19|6 pages

Something new

A comment

chapter 20|6 pages

Identities through things

A comment