Search Books
Consuming History: Historia… An Historical Geography of …

Everyday Life and Consumer Culture in Eighteenth-Century Damascus (Publications on the Near East)

Author James Grehan
Publisher University of Washington Press
Category History
📄 Viewing lite version Full site ›
🌎 Shop on Amazon — choose country
60.00 USD
🛒 Buy New on Amazon 🇺🇸 🏷 Buy Used — $56.59

✓ In stock. Usually ships within 2 to 3 days.

Share:
Book Details
Author(s)James Grehan
ISBN / ASIN029598676X
ISBN-139780295986760
AvailabilityIn stock. Usually ships within 2 to 3 days.
Sales Rank1,952,133
CategoryHistory
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

Damascus was for centuries a center of learning and commerce. Drawing on the city's dazzling literary tradition-a rich collection of poetry, chronicles, travel accounts, and biographical dictionaries-as well as on Islamic court records, James Grehan explores the material culture of premodern Damascus, reconstructing the economic infrastructure, social customs, and private consumer habits that dominated this cosmopolitan hub in the 1700s. He sketches a lively history of diet, furniture, fashion, and other aspects of daily life, providing an unusual and intimate account of the choices, constraints, and compromises that defined consumer behavior.

Coffee, tobacco, and light firearms had arisen as new luxury items in preceding centuries, and Grehan traces the usage of such goods in order to get a picture of the overall standard of living in the premodern Middle East. He looks particularly at how wealth and poverty were defined and how consumption patterns expressed notions of taste, class, and power, illuminating the prominent role played by Damascus in shaping the economy and culture of the Middle East.

In assessing the magnitude of social change in modern times, we have few benchmarks from the period preceding the onset of modernity in the nineteenth century. This informative study will make possible more precise cultural and economic comparisons between different parts of the world as it stood on the brink of a radically new economic and political order. The book's focus on a little-examined period and region will appeal to scholars and students of urban social history and Arab popular culture.
The Bet, and Other Stories
View
Pakistan and the Bomb: Public Opinion and Nuclear Opti…
View
Writing National Histories: Western Europe Since 1800
View
Empire in Eclipse
View
Monks and Laymen in Byzantium, 843-1118
View
The Wilmington and Western Railroad (Images of Rail: D…
View
Black Sailor, White Navy: Racial Unrest in the Fleet d…
View
Feasibility of Laser Power Transmission to a High-Alti…
View
The Democratic Republic: 1801-1815
View