Livre - The familiarity of strangers

909 TRI

Description

Livre

Yale university press

Trivellato Francesca 1970 - ...

Presentation materielle : 1 vol. (XIII-470 p.)

Dimensions : 25 cm

“This is a signal book, a model to be emulated, a tour de force in modern historiographical skill, one of the best I have ever read.” KENNETH STOW, American Historical Review This groundbreaking book takes a new approach to the study of cross-cultural trade, blending archival research with historical narrative and economic analysis. The author focuses on the early modern Jewish community of Livorno, Tuscany, and its extensive business ties with Jews and non-Jews across the Mediterranean, Europe, and Portuguese India. “Trivellato has accomplished something special—a brilliant description of a family, of a nation, of a period of history, of an economy and of a culture…. This is one of the best and most original books on Jewish history published this year.” SETH J. FRANTZMAN, Jerusalem Post “The Familiarity of Strangers offers ground-breaking perspectives on social networks and the market, the culture of trust, the history of Sephardic Jews, and the global reach of early modern commerce. It successfully challenges our stereotypes about capitalism, rational choice, cosmopolitanism, and the role of kin in commercial life. With access to archives in numerous countries, it offers an exciting and new approach to the interaction of culture and economic life.” MARGARET C. JACOB, University of California, Los Angeles Winner of the American Historical Association’s 2010 Leo Gershoy Award for the most outstanding work published in English on any aspect of seventeenth- and eighteenth-century European history. Co-winner of the 2010 Jordan Schnitzer Book Award for the best book in Early Modern and Modern Jewish History published in English between 2006 and 2010. Francesca Trivellato is Frederick W. Hilles Professor of History at Yale University.

Acknowledgments, vii Note on Terminology and Units of Measurement, ix Introduction, p. 1 1. Diasporic Families and the Making of a Business Partnership, p. 21 2. Livorno and the Western Sephardic Diaspora, p. 43 3. A New City, A New Society? Livorno, the Jewish Nation, and Communitarian Cosmopolitanism, p. 70 4. Between State Commercial Power and Trading Diasporas: Sephardim in the Mediterranean, p. 102 5. Marriage, Dowry, Inheritance, and Types of Commercial Association, p. 132 6. Commission Agency, Economic Information, and the Legal and Social Foundations of Business Cooperation, p. 153 7. Cross-Cultural Trade and the Etiquette of Merchants’ Letters, p. 177 8. Ergas and Silvera’s Heterogeneous Trading Networks, p. 194 9. The Exchange of Mediterranean Coral and Indian Diamonds, p. 224 10. The “Big Diamond Affair”: Merchants on Trial, p. 251 CONCLUSION, p. 271 Notes, p. 279 References, p. 385 Index, p. 447

Bibliogr. p. 385 -445. Index