罗伯特·s·杜普莱西斯。2016. 《物质大西洋:1650-1800年大西洋世界的服装、商业和殖民》

Q3 Social Sciences
Adel Manai
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引用次数: 9

摘要

罗伯特·s·杜普莱西斯。2016. 《物质大西洋:1650-1800年大西洋世界的服装、商业和殖民》。剑桥:剑桥大学出版社,351页。在17世纪中期到18世纪晚期之间,欧洲的扩张和商业达到了顶峰。它们塑造了早期的大西洋世界,一个内部和外部网络复杂的世界,使其充满活力,多样化,持久,最终全球化。这些网络涉及广泛的文化和人口转移和破裂,并建立新的经济和社会。随着大西洋世界的建立,出现了商业趋势、织物消费和服装文化。服装是这些不同经济和社会文化现象的核心。材料大西洋主要是关于这些商业模式,他们的获取和使用。它研究了不同种族、社会、职业和阶级类别的男性和女性如何在各种地理气候、政治和社会文化环境中使用各种材料设计服装,这为创新提供了机会,同时也施加了严格的限制。这本引人入胜、记录深刻的书改变并扩展了现有的关于近代早期全球化、大西洋世界和消费的学术研究。它描绘了消费者可以接触到的面料和服装,追溯了它们的获取方法和场合,分析了它们的使用意义,并阐明了在工厂制度出现之前,这些重要发展对全球纺织工业的影响。这些发展包括大规模的奴役,新产品和来源产品的激增,消费者行为和态度的改变,以及社会身份的确立。织物和服装确实成为主要的跨文化交换消费品。它们的经济意义是显而易见的,但它们的意义却不那么明显。衣着包括个人的表现和社会地位和威望。因此,它激发了一系列的图像表征。物质大西洋覆盖了广阔的地理区域,从西非海岸海岸角城堡的独立土著国家,安哥拉和中非西部的邻近王国,到西班牙的布宜诺斯艾利斯,荷兰的开普敦,法属加勒比南部地区的圣多明各,英国殖民地皇家港,以及北美大陆的法国殖民地新奥尔良,路易斯安那州农村和蒙特利尔。在这片大西洋上,欧洲人口贩卖、天主教皈依和殖民交织在一起,繁荣发展。…
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Robert S. DuPlessis. 2016. the Material Atlantic: Clothing, Commerce, and Colonization in the Atlantic World, 1650-1800
Robert S. DuPlessis. 2016. The Material Atlantic: Clothing, Commerce, and Colonization in the Atlantic World, 1650-1800. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 351 pp. Between the mid-seventeenth and the late eighteenth centuries European expansion and commerce were at their zenith. They gave shape to the early Atlantic world, a world of complex internal and external networks, which made it dynamic, diverse, enduring and ultimately global. These networks were involved in extensive cultural and population transfers and ruptures and set up new economies and societies. Following the construction of the Atlantic world, commercial trends, fabric consumption, and sartorial cultures appeared. Clothing was at the core of these diverse economic and socio-cultural phenomena. The Material Atlantic is primarily about these commercial patterns, their acquisition and uses. It looks into how men and women belonging to various ethnic, social, occupational, and class categories designed the apparel from all sorts of materials in a variety of geo-climatic, political, and socio-cultural environments, which offered opportunities for innovation and imposed stringent constraints at the same time. This engaging and profoundly documented account alters and extends the existing scholarship on globalization in the early modern period, the Atlantic world, and consumption. It depicts the fabrics and attire accessible to consumers, traces the methods and occasions of their acquisition, analyzes the meanings of their usages, and explicates the implications of these crucial developments on global textile industries before the advent of the factory system. These developments included large-scale enslavement, the proliferation of new and sourced goods, the alteration of consumer behavior and attitudes, and the assertion of social identities. Fabrics and garments became indeed the dominant interculturally exchanged consumer goods. Their economic significance was obvious, while their meaning was less so. Dress includes personal expression and social status and prestige. For that, it provokes a whole range of pictorial representations. The material Atlantic covered a vast geographical area stretching from the independent indigenous states of Cape Coast Castle on the West African Coast, Angola and neighboring kingdoms in West Central Africa, to Spanish Buenos Aires, Dutch Cape Town, the Southern district of French Caribbean Saint Domingue, British colonial Port Royal, and the continental North American French colonies of New Orleans, rural Louisiana, and Montreal. In this Atlantic, European rafficking, Catholic conversion, and colonization intermingled and thrived. …
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来源期刊
African Studies Quarterly
African Studies Quarterly Social Sciences-Social Sciences (all)
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