附註:Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 17 Jan 2019).
The right to dress : sartorial politics in Germany, c. 1300-1750 / Ulinka Rublack -- Playing by the rules? : dressing without sumptuary laws in the Low Countries from the fourteenth to the eighteenth century / Isis Sturtewagen and Bruno Blonde? -- "Outlandish superfluities" : luxury and clothing in Scottish and English sumptuary law, fourteenth to the seventeenth century / Maria Hayward -- Regulating sumptuousness : changing configurations of morals, politics, and economics in Swiss cities in the seventeenth and eighteenth Centuries / Andre? Holenstein -- Dangerous fashion in Swedish sumptuary law / Eva I. Andersson -- Sumptuary laws in Italy : financial resource and instrument of rule / Maria Giuseppina Muzzarelli -- Defending the right to dress : two sumptuary law protests in sixteenth-century Milan / Catherine Kove -- Against the sumptuary regime : sumptuary prosecutions in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Padova / Luca Mola? and Giorgio Riello -- Luxury, novelty, and nationality : sumptuary legislation in late medieval and early modern Spain / Amanda Wunder -- Sumptuary laws in Portugal and its empire from the fourteenth to the eighteenth century / Francisco Bethencourt -- Splendour and magnificence : diplomacy and sumptuary codes in early modern Batavia / Adam Clulow -- Race, clothing and identity : sumptuary laws in colonial Spanish America / Rebecca Earle -- Sartorial sorting in the colonial Caribbean and North America / Robert DuPlessis -- "Grandeur and show" : clothing, commerce, and the capital in early modern Russia / Matthew P. Romaniello -- Women, minorities, and the changing politics of dress in the Ottoman Empire, 1650-1830 / Madeline Zilfi -- Wearing the hat of loyalty : imperial power and dress reform in Ming Dynasty China / BuYun Chen -- Regulating excess : the cultural politics of consumption in Tokugawa Japan / Katsuya Hirano -- Sumptuary laws in precolonial West Africa : the examples of Benin and Dahomey / Toby Green.
摘要:This is the first global history of dress regulation and its place in broader debates around how human life and societies should be visualised and materialised. Sumptuary laws were a tool on the part of states to regulate not only manufacturing systems and moral economies via the medium of expenditure and consumption of clothing but also banquets, festivities and funerals. Leading scholars on Asian, Latin American, Ottoman and European history shed new light on how and why items of dress became key aspirational goods across society, how they were lobbied for and marketed, and whether or not sumptuary laws were implemented by cities, states and empires to restrict or channel trade and consumption. Their findings reveal the significance of sumptuary laws in medieval and early modern societies as a site of contestation between individuals and states and how dress as an expression of identity developed as a modern 'human right'.