Early globalization, rising cosmopolitanism and a new world of goods -- Fabric and furs: a new framework of global consumption -- Dressing world peoples: regulation and cosmopolitan desire -- Smuggling, wrecking and scavenging: or, the informal pathways to consumption -- Tobacco and the politics of consumption -- Stitching the global: contact, connection and translation in needlework arts through the sixteenth to nineteenth centuries -- Conclusion: realizing cosmopolitan material culture.
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