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ISBN: PB: 9780300168181

Yale University Press

October 2010

256 pp.

23.4x15.6 cm

1 map, 17 black&white illus.

PB:
£16,99
QTY:

Categories:

Plumes

Ostrich Feathers, Jews, and a Lost World of Global Commerce

The thirst for exotic ornament among fashionable women in the metropoles of Europe and America prompted a bustling global trade in ostrich feathers that flourished from the 1880s until the First World War. When feathers fell out of fashion with consumers, the result was an economic catastrophe for many, a worldwide feather bust. In this remarkable book, Sarah Stein draws on rich archival materials to bring to light the prominent and varied roles of Jews in the feather trade. She discovers that Jews fostered and nurtured the trade across the global commodity chain and throughout the far-flung territories where ostriches were reared and plucked, and their feathers were sorted, exported, imported, auctioned, wholesaled, and finally manufactured for sale. From Yiddish-speaking Russian-Lithuanian feather handlers in South Africa to London manufacturers and wholesalers, from rival Sephardic families whose feathers were imported from the Sahara and traded across the Mediterranean, from New York's Lower East Side to entrepreneurial farms in the American West, Stein explores the details of a remarkably vibrant yet ephemeral culture. This is a singular story of global commerce, colonial economic practices, and the rise and fall of a glamorous luxury item.

About the Author

Sarah Abrevaya Stein is Professor and Maurice Amado Chair in Sephardic Studies, Department of History, UCLA.

Reviews

"It is impossible to read this story of boom and bust without drawing on parallels to today's market: Stein lucidly analyses how a single global commodity was shaped by modern consumer desires, and how it was destroyed almost overnight by a sudden shift in fashion" – Judith Flanders, Sunday Telegraph

"I loved this book. I knew nothing about the subject, but Sarah Stein kept me going right to the last page... her comprehensive, meticulous, and fascinating history is a vast subject, which she admirably outlines in straightforward language... a terrific [story]" – Jonathan Mirksy, Literary Review

"She makes interesting points about the origins and rise of the South African trade and explains the consequent decline of the market from the north African ports of Tripoli, Benghazi and Essouaria" – Prudence Hone, Guardian