In this Book

buy this book Buy This Book in Print
summary
Revealing the entangled lives of texts and textiles in the early modern Atlantic world."Textiles are the books that the colony was not able to burn."—Asociación Femenina para el Desarrollo de Sacatepéquez (AFEDES)A history of the book in the Americas, across deep time, would reveal the origins of a literary tradition woven rather than written. It is in what Danielle Skeehan calls material texts that a people's history and culture is preserved, in their embroidery, their needlework, and their woven cloth. In defining textiles as a form of cultural writing, The Fabric of Empire challenges long-held ideas about authorship, textuality, and the making of books. It is impossible to separate text from textiles in the early modern Atlantic: novels, newspapers, broadsides, and pamphlets were printed on paper made from household rags. Yet the untethering of text from textile served a colonial agenda to define authorship as reflected in ink and paper and the pen as an instrument wielded by learned men and women. Skeehan explains that the colonial definition of the book, and what constituted writing and authorship, left colonial regimes blind to nonalphabetic forms of media that preserved cultural knowledge, history, and lived experience. This book shifts how we look at cultural objects such as books and fabric and provides a material and literary history of resistance among the globally dispossessed.Each chapter examines the manufacture and global circulation of a particular type of cloth alongside the complex print networks that ensured the circulation of these textiles, promoted their production, petitioned for or served to curtail the rights of textile workers, facilitated the exchange of textiles for human lives, and were, in turn, printed and written on surfaces manufactured from broken-down linen and cotton fibers. Bringing together methods and materials traditionally belonging to literary studies, book history, and material culture studies, The Fabric of Empire provides a new model for thinking about the different media, languages, literacies, and textualities in the early Atlantic world.

Table of Contents

restricted access Download Full Book
  1. Cover
  2. restricted access
    • Download PDF Download
  1. Title Page, Copyright
  2. pp. i-iv
  3. restricted access
    • Download PDF Download
  1. Contents
  2. pp. v-vi
  3. restricted access
    • Download PDF Download
  1. List of Illustrations
  2. pp. vii-viii
  3. restricted access
    • Download PDF Download
  1. Series Editor's Foreword
  2. Cathy Matson
  3. pp. ix-x
  4. restricted access
    • Download PDF Download
  1. Acknowledgments
  2. pp. xi-xiv
  3. restricted access
    • Download PDF Download
  1. The Fabric of Empire
  1. Introduction: The Material (Con)Texts of Global Modernity
  2. pp. 1-14
  3. restricted access
    • Download PDF Download
  1. PART I. The Empire's new Clothes: British Publics and Imperial Politics, 1650-1720
  1. 1. Patterns for Plantation: New World Silk and the Natural History of Settler Colonialism
  2. pp. 17-36
  3. restricted access
    • Download PDF Download
  1. 2. Indo-Atlantic Modernity: The Early Global Cotton Trade and the Emergence of Racial Capitalism
  2. pp. 37-54
  3. restricted access
    • Download PDF Download
  1. PART II. Revolutionary Threads: New World Publics and Insurgent Economies, 1750-1800
  1. 3. The Republic of Homespun: Material Economies of the American Revolution
  2. pp. 57-71
  3. restricted access
    • Download PDF Download
  1. 4. Materializing the Black Atlantic: African Captives, Caribbean Slaves, and Creole Fashioning
  2. pp. 72-90
  3. restricted access
    • Download PDF Download
  1. PART III. The Fabric of American Empire: Imagined Communities and New Geographies, 1600-1865
  1. 5. Oriental America: Silk Geographies in the Era of the Early Republic
  2. pp. 93-112
  3. restricted access
    • Download PDF Download
  1. 6. Empires in Rags: Hemispheric American Material and Literary Texts
  2. pp. 113-129
  3. restricted access
    • Download PDF Download
  1. Conclusion. Weaving Revolution in the Global South
  2. pp. 130-138
  3. restricted access
    • Download PDF Download
  1. Notes
  2. pp. 139-168
  3. restricted access
    • Download PDF Download
  1. Essay on Sources
  2. pp. 169-174
  3. restricted access
    • Download PDF Download
  1. Index
  2. pp. 175-184
  3. restricted access
    • Download PDF Download
Back To Top

This website uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience on our website. Without cookies your experience may not be seamless.