By looking closely at silk in China and Mexico in the early modern period, this study contributes to our understanding of the development of the global economy. At the center of the book is silk itself: its colors, its textures, and its power to seduce. Duan uses a wide variety of sources—including casta paintings and Chinese biji essays—to show the ways in which silk was produced and consumed. This book is a must-read for scholars interested in the development of the global economy, as well as those interested in textiles and the histories of consumption and the circulation of goods.
— Ann Waltner, University of Minnesota
Duan’s engaging study of silk seamlessly integrates economic, environmental, cultural, and religious documentation in the context of global history. Silk was the foremost Chinese export exchanged for silver imports over centuries. On the supply side, silkworms survive with intense skilled labor and access to mulberry leaves…. On the demand side, sumptuary laws in China and New Spain were circumvented via rampant smuggling and dynamic customer preferences. Duan’s wide-ranging account of diverse silk products is based upon an impressive array of Asian, American, and European sources, rendering it an essential contribution to textile history and global history.
— Dennis O. Flynn, University of the Pacific, Pacific World History Institute
Duan’s study of silk production in China and New Spain offers a long overdue examination of the development of early modern global trade in the Pacific. Meticulously researched and original, Duan’s exploration of the production and consumption of silk provides new insights on how manufacturing techniques and clothing styles spread from China to the Americas. She also examines the tensions that arose as global processes articulated themselves in different ways at the local level. This is a valuable and timely study of an underexamined topic of immense scholarly importance.
— Michael Matthews, Elon University
Duan achieves a rare trifecta of world history—serious and measured comparisons, deep analysis of interconnections, and a truly transnational framework. As a research work, this book is significant. As a teaching tool, it has enormous potential to liberate students from their preconceptions about the early modern world and the ways people are connected historically and currently.
— Trevor R. Getz, San Francisco State University
This book will be useful for readers of all levels who are interested in areas that range from global history to the history of colonialism, early modern trade and economic systems, the history of sericulture, and maritime history, as well as those focused more particularly on late-imperial China or Spain and its New World empire. It has also aptly been published as part of a new series launched by the press titled “Empires and Entanglements in the Early Modern World” whose monographs all focus on different connections across regions and oceans. There really is no com-parable monograph that examines the trans-Pacific silk trade, and as such it fills an important gap in scholarship.
— The Middle Ground Journal