>
The City of Blue and White: Chinese Porcelain and the Early Modern World

The City of Blue and White: Chinese Porcelain and the Early Modern World

  • £14.69
  • Save £12


Anne Gerritsen
Cambridge University Press, 5/7/2020
EAN 9781108499958, ISBN10: 1108499953

Hardcover, 354 pages, 25.1 x 23.4 x 2 cm
Language: English

We think of blue and white porcelain as the ultimate global commodity: throughout East and Southeast Asia, the Indian Ocean including the African coasts, the Americas and Europe, consumers desired Chinese porcelains. Many of these were made in the kilns in and surrounding Jingdezhen. Found in almost every part of the world, Jingdezhen's porcelains had a far-reaching impact on global consumption, which in turn shaped the local manufacturing processes. The imperial kilns of Jingdezhen produced ceramics for the court, while nearby private kilns manufactured for the global market. In this beautifully illustrated study, Anne Gerritsen asks how this kiln complex could manufacture such quality, quantity and variety. She explores how objects tell the story of the past, connecting texts with objects, objects with natural resources, and skilled hands with the shapes and designs they produced. Through the manufacture and consumption of Jingdezhen's porcelains, she argues, China participated in the early modern world.

1. The shard market of Jingdezhen
2. City of imperial choice
Jingdezhen, 1000–1200
3. Circulations of white
4. From Cizhou to Jizhou
the long history of the emergence of blue and white porcelain
5. From Jizhou to Jingdezhen in the fourteenth century
the emergence of blue and white and the circulations of people and things
6. Blue and white porcelain and the fifteenth-century world
7. The city of blue and white
visualizing space in Ming Jingdezhen, 1500–1600
8. Anxieties over resources in sixteenth-century Jingdezhen
9. Skilled hands
managing human resources and skill in the sixteenth-century imperial kilns
10. Material circulations in the sixteenth century
11. Local and global in Jingdezhen's long seventeenth century
12. Epilogue
fragments of a global past.