List of Illustrations
List of Maps
List of Figures
List of Tables
Preface
Introduction: The World of South Asian Textiles, 1500-1850, Giorgio
Riello and Tirthankar Roy
I. REGIONS OF EXCHANGE: TEXTILES IN THE INDIAN OCEAN AND BEYOND
1. Southeast Asian Consumption of Indian and British Cotton Cloth,
1600-1850, Anthony Reid
2. Cloths of a New Fashion: Indian Ocean Networks of Exchange and
Cloth Zones of Contact in Africa and India in the Eighteenth and
Nineteenth Centuries, Pedro Machado
3. English versus Indian Cotton Textiles: The Impact of Imports on
Cotton Textile Production in West Africa, Joseph Inikori
4. British Exports of Raw Cotton from India to China during the
Late Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Centuries, H. V. Bowen
5. The Resurgence of Intra-Asian Trade, 1800-1850Kaoru Sugihara
II. REGIONS OF PRODUCTION: TEXTILES IN SOUTH ASIA
6. The Textile Industry and the Economy of South India, 1500-1800,
David Washbrook
7. Four Centuries of Decline? Understanding the Changing Structure
of the South Indian Textile Industry, Ian Wendt
8. From Market-determined to Coercion-based: Textile Manufacturing
in Eighteenth-Century Bengal, Om Prakash
9. The Political Economy of Textiles in Western India: Weavers,
Merchants and the Transition to a Colonial Economy, Lakshmi
Subrahmanian
10. Competition and Control in the Market for Textiles: The Weavers
and the English East India Company in the Eighteenth Century,
Bishnupriya Gupta
III. REGIONS OF CHANGE: INDIAN TEXTILES AND EUROPEAN
DEVELOPMENT
11. The Indian Apprenticeship: The Trade of Indian Textiles and the
Making of European Cottons, Giorgio Riello
12. The French Connection: Indian Cottons and their Early Modern
Technology, George Bryan Souza
13. Fashioning Global Trade: Indian Textiles, Gender Meanings and
European Consumers, 1500-1800, Beverly Lemire
14. Quality, Cotton and the Global Luxury Trade, Maxine Berg
15. Historical Issues of Deindustrialisation in Nineteenth-Century
South India, Prasannan Parthasarathi
Glossary
Bibliography
Notes on Contributors
Index
Giorgio Riello, Ph.D. (2002) in History, University College London,
is Associate Professor in Global History and Culture at the
University of Warwick. He has published on early modern textiles,
dress and fashion in Europe and Asia.
Tirthankar Roy, Ph.D. (1989) in Economics, Jawaharlal Nehru
University, is a Lecturer of Economic History at London School of
Economics. He has published extensively on the economic and social
history of modern and early modern South Asia, and has contributed
to the textile history of the region in particular.
"There are few books that can equal [this book] in providing
readers with an appreciation of the variety of interconnections
between different regions of the world before the nineteenth
century. Cloth, it clearly demonstrates, is an invaluable entry
point into global economic history." – Douglas Haynes, Dartmouth
College, in: H-Net
"How India Clothed the World is an ambitious book which takes a
comprehensive look at South Asian textiles from the minutiae of
technology and procurement to the global movement of products and
'invisible cargoes'." – Anand V. Swamy, William College, in:
Journal of Economic History
"Until recently, the production and exchange of textiles were
understood as purely economic activities in which production
technology, weavers, merchants, companies, and markets played a
prominent role. This volume, instead, invokes consumer choice,
fashion, gender, social hierarchy, aesthetics, and the
dissemination of knowledge as playing important roles in
determining the consumption and production of textiles in both Asia
and Europe." – Ghulam Nadri, Georgia State University, in: Economic
History Review
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