List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Note on Transliteration and Names
Introduction
1 • A Pair of Steppe Earrings
2 • A Hellenistic Glass Bowl
3 • A Hoard of Kushan Coins
4 • Amluk Dara Stupa
1 5 • A Bactrian Ewer
6 • A Khotanese Plaque
7 • The Blue Qur?an
8 • A Byzantine Hunter Silk
9 • A Chinese Almanac
10 • The Unknown Slave
Bibliography
Index
Susan Whitfield, author of Life Along the Silk Road, is a scholar, curator, writer, and traveler who has been exploring the history, art, religions, cultures, objects, exploration, and people of the Silk Road for the past three decades.
"One of the virtues of Whitfield’s approach is that she is able to
range far and wide among the various peoples, cultures, and
polities of Eurasia and Africa. Though half of her ten chapters
deal with objects that were excavated within the present-day
boundaries of China—a reflection of the longstanding Sinocentric
bias in the field of Silk Road studies—Whitfield goes to great
lengths to contextualize these finds within broader Eurasian
networks of exchange far outside of China."
*Silk Road Journal*
"Whitfield certainly seems to have identified a theme worth
pursuing: the objects of the Silk Road are fascinating and a single
object can encompass within it huge swathes, geographical and
chronological, of human history."
*Asian Review of Books*
"In Silk, Slaves, and Stupas, Susan Whitfield reminds her readers
once again why she so thoroughly deserves her reputation as one
of the most accomplished of all Silk Road scholars. [The book]
demonstrates the author's command of all facets of Silk Road
studies, and also her ability to unfold the story of this important
period and process in word history by moving seamlessly from the
particular to the general, from a single object to an entire field
of research."
*Central Asian Survey*
‘Whitfield’s new book provides us with a brilliant example of how
material history should be written.’
*Journal of Asian Studies*
"...this is an impressive and comprehensive work, one that can
easily be envisaged as a primer for a university course that
introduces the principal themes of the Silk Roads. There is much
here too, though, for more established scholars working in part or
all of this field thanks to Whitfield's research, which is up to
date with the latest thinking on manumission of slaves, on the
construction of Buddhist stupas, or the techniques of glass making.
Susan Whitfield has written a rather wonderful book; it will serve
as a gateway that will inspire future generations of scholars to
follow in her footsteps."
*Journal of Medieval Worlds*
"The level of detailed evidence that [Whitfield] unearths . .
. is both impressive and enticing."
*Journal of World History*
"A page-turner comparable to a good detective story."
*International Institute for Asian Studies*
"All these [Silk Road] objects have intriguing stories to tell, and
Susan Whitfield succeeds impressively in giving them a voice."
*New Global Studies*
"Kaleidoscopic. . . . A pleasure to explore and will delight
readers from a wide sphere."
*Asian Perspectives: The Journal of Archaeology and the Pacific*
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