ABSTRACT

Globalism is often discussed using abstract terms, such as ‘networks’ or ‘flows’ and usually in relation to recent history. Global Design History moves us past this limited view of globalism, broadening our sense of this key term in history and theory.

Individual chapters focus our attention on objects, and the stories they can tell us about cultural interactions on a global scale. They place these concrete things into contexts, such as trade, empire, mediation, and various forms of design practice. Among the varied topics included are:

  • the global underpinnings of Renaissance material culture
  • the trade of Indian cottons in the eighteenth-century
  • the Japanese tea ceremony as a case of ‘import substitution’
  • German design in the context of empire
  • handcrafted modernist furniture in Turkey
  • Australian fashions employing ‘ethnic’ motifs
  • an experimental UK-Ghanaian design partnership
  • Chinese social networking websites
  • the international circulation of contemporary architects.

Featuring work from leading design historians, each chapter is paired with a ‘response’, designed to expand the discussion and test the methodologies on offer. An extensive bibliography and resource guide will also aid further research, providing students with a user friendly model for approaches to global design. 

Global Design History will be useful for upper-level undergraduate and postgraduate students, academics and researchers in design history and art history, and related subjects such as anthropology, craft studies and cultural geography.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

Towards global design history

chapter 1|10 pages

The Global Renaissance

Cross-cultural objects in the early modern period

chapter |4 pages

Response

chapter 2|9 pages

Global Design in Jingdezhen

Local production and global connections

chapter |3 pages

Response

chapter |3 pages

Response

chapter |3 pages

Response

chapter |3 pages

Response

chapter 7|10 pages

‘From The Far Corners’

Telephones, globalization, and the production of locality in the 1920s

chapter |3 pages

Response

chapter 8|9 pages

The Globalization of the Deutscher Werkbund

Design reform, industrial policy, and German foreign policy, 1907–1914

chapter |3 pages

Response

chapter 9|9 pages

Where in the World is Design?

The case of India, 1900–1945

chapter |4 pages

Response

chapter 10|11 pages

Handmade Modernity

Post-war design in Turkey

chapter |4 pages

Response

chapter 11|12 pages

Old Empire and New Global Luxury

Fashioning global design 1

chapter |3 pages

Response

chapter 12|10 pages

Analyzing Social Networking Websites

The design of Happy Network in China

chapter |3 pages

Response

chapter |6 pages

Response

Global agoraphobia

chapter 14|9 pages

E-Artisans

Contemporary design for the global market

chapter |3 pages

Response