Commercial Cosmopolitanism?: Cross-Cultural Objects, Spaces, and Institutions in the Early Modern World

Author:   Felicia Gottmann (Northumbria University, UK)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9780367714864


Pages:   264
Publication Date:   26 September 2022
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Commercial Cosmopolitanism?: Cross-Cultural Objects, Spaces, and Institutions in the Early Modern World


Overview

This book showcases the wide variety of commercial cosmopolitan practices that arose from the global economic entanglements of the early modern period. Cosmopolitanism is not only a philosophical ideal: for many centuries it has also been an everyday practice across the globe. The early modern era saw hitherto unprecedented levels of economic interconnectedness. States, societies, and individuals reacted with a mixture of commercial idealism and commercial anxiety, seeking at once to exploit new opportunities for growth whilst limiting its disruptive effects. In highlighting the range of commercial cosmopolitan practices that grew out of early modern globalisation, the book demonstrates that it provided robust alternatives to the universalising western imperial model of the later period. Deploying a number of interdisciplinary methodologies, the kind of ‘methodological cosmopolitanism’ that Ulrich Beck has called for, chapters provide agency-centred evaluations of the risks and opportunities inherent in the ambiguous role of the cosmopolitan, who, often playing on and mobilising a number of identities, operated in between and outside of different established legal, social, and cultural systems. The book will be important reading for students and scholars working at the intersection of economic, global, and cultural history.

Full Product Details

Author:   Felicia Gottmann (Northumbria University, UK)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Weight:   0.620kg
ISBN:  

9780367714864


ISBN 10:   0367714868
Pages:   264
Publication Date:   26 September 2022
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Tertiary & Higher Education
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Commercial Cosmopolitanism? Transcultural Actors, Objects, Spaces, and Practices in the Early Modern World Part 1: Cosmopolitan Spaces, Objects, and Actors 1. Controlling the Golden Geese: Canton, Nagasaki and the Limits of Hybridity 2. Trouble in the Contact Zone: Jeremias van Vliet in seventeenth-century Ayutthaya 3. Chinese Commercial Cosmopolitanism in the Eighteenth-Century Mekong River Delta: The Case of Mạc Thiên Tứ 4. Money Talks: Confessions of a Disgraced Cosmopolitan Coin of the 1640s 5. ‘This Whole Business Should Be Kept Very Secret’: The English Tobacco Workhouses in Moscow 6. Goods from the Sea Countries: Material Cosmopolitanism in Atlantic West Africa 7. From the Indian Ocean to the Atlantic: The Nineteenth-Century Commercial Ventures of Oman-Zanzibar Part 2: Institutions, Practices, and Agents 8. Hats, Furs and Indigenous Traders in a Global Trade 9. The Social Networks of Cosmopolitan Fraudsters: The Prussian Bengal Company as a Transnational Corporation 10. Quasi-cosmopolitanism: French Directors in Ouidah and Pondicherry (1674-1746) 11. Commercial Cosmopolitanism? The Case of the Firm De Bruijn & Cloots (Lisbon) in the 18th century 12. 'The Limits of Cosmopolitanism: Ottoman Algiers in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries 13. Making Ireland Poor: Poverty, Trade and Sectarianism in the Eighteenth Century Atlantic

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Author Information

Felicia Gottmann is Senior Lecturer in History at Northumbria University, Newcastle. She is the author of Global Trade, Smuggling, and the Making of Economic Liberalism: Asian Textiles in France 1680-1760 (2016) and, with Maxine Berg et al. editor of Goods from the East, 1600-1800: trading Eurasia (2015). She held Fellowships at the Universities of Harvard, Warwick, Dundee, and Oxford, and is PI of the UKRI-funded Future Leaders Fellowship Project ‘Migration, Adaptation, Innovation 1500–1800’.

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