Foreword
Acknowledgements
Chapter One: Global Phenomenon, Local Varieties
Chapter Two: The Maldives: Procurement and Export
Chapter Three: India: In the Beginning
Chapter Four: Southeast Asia: Intra-Asian Interactions
Chapter Five: Yunnan: An Indian Influence in the Southeast
Asian-Chinese World
Chapter Six: Why Not in Early China?
Chapter Seven: Cowrie Money in West Africa: Connecting the Worlds,
Old and New
Chapter Eight: The Pacific Islands and North America: Out of the
Bengali System
Chapter Nine: More Than Just Money
Chapter Ten: The Cowrie Money World
Bibliography
Index
Bin Yang is Associate Professor of History at the University of Macau. His research interests include Chinese history, frontier and ethnic studies, Sino-Southeast Asian-Indian triangular interactions, world history, and history of science, technology and medicine. His dissertation "Between Winds and Clouds: The Making of Yunnan (Second Century BCE – Twentieth Century CE)" won the 2004 Gutenberg-e Prize of the American Historical Association, and it was published online as well as in print by Columbia University Press. He has published research papers in some internationally prestigious journals such as The China Quarterly, Modern Asian Studies, Journal of World History, Bulletin of the History of Medicine, and Journal of Women’s History. He is one of the founding member of the Asian Association of World Historians and serves as Manning Editor of the Asian Reviews of World Histories.
'Researchers and instructors will have much to gain from adding
this text to their bibliographies and course syllabi... students
and instructors of world history will benefit from this important
text as they put together the pieces of our global past, one shell
at a time.' - Eric Spierer, Assistant Coach, Groton School,
Massachusetts, USA'Cowrie Shells and Cowrie Money [...]argues that
its star commodity has agency. In this dense, erudite monograph,
[...], Bin Yang focuses clearly on the global quality and scale of
the agency that he attributes to the “money cowrie” (Cypraea
moneta, or Monetaria moneta), the shell of a small mollusk of the
Cypraea family, which was used as coin in Asia from ancient to
modern times. This is the first comprehensive study of the “world
of the cowrie.” It shows how the agency of cowries came from their
utility in market exchange...Bin Yang deploys a vast array of
documentary and archaeological evidence to describe the lost world
of cowrie money...The global history in this book is innovative and
path-breaking. The connected history of Asia and West Africa is a
most impressive contribution.' - David Ludden, New York University,
USA
'Researchers and instructors will have much to gain from adding
this text to their bibliographies and course syllabi... students
and instructors of world history will benefit from this important
text as they put together the pieces of our global past, one shell
at a time.' - Eric Spierer, Assistant Coach, Groton School,
Massachusetts, USA'Cowrie Shells and Cowrie Money [...]argues that
its star commodity has agency. In this dense, erudite monograph,
[...], Bin Yang focuses clearly on the global quality and scale of
the agency that he attributes to the “money cowrie” (Cypraea
moneta, or Monetaria moneta), the shell of a small mollusk of the
Cypraea family, which was used as coin in Asia from ancient to
modern times. This is the first comprehensive study of the “world
of the cowrie.” It shows how the agency of cowries came from their
utility in market exchange...Bin Yang deploys a vast array of
documentary and archaeological evidence to describe the lost world
of cowrie money...The global history in this book is innovative and
path-breaking. The connected history of Asia and West Africa is a
most impressive contribution.' - David Ludden, New York University,
USA
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