{"title":"Caley霍兰。保险时代:战后美国的风险、治理和安全私有化。芝加哥:芝加哥大学出版社,2021。264页。ISBN 978-0-226-78438-0, $40.00(布)。","authors":"Clarence Hatton-Proulx","doi":"10.1017/eso.2021.45","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"waiting to be sewn into the fabric. Besides the social significance, Marsh also reconstructs Atlantic sericulture as a fascinating cultural space, such as its impact on early American nationalism. Unfortunately, the approach of the book also offers Marsh little help to thoroughly interpret the “intertwining of the international and the local” cultures (7). The diverse populations of silk workers brought distinctive religions, ideologies, and technologies into the Atlantic World. Marsh mentions the heterogeneous silk raisers, including Catholics, FrenchHuguenots, German speakers, Italian immigrants, and Scots-Irish Presbyterians, in Europe and theNewWorld. The author notices the collective modes of production within Meso-American communities and the Spanish Viceroy’s insistence on channeling the profits of sericulture to individual Native Americans (68–69, 74). He also touches on transnational networks of knowledge when discussing Jesuits’ transmittingAsian silkpractices toFranceorEzraStiles’s reading theories from China and Italy. However, the book seldom explicates whether or how the wild array of cultures and ideas clashed and integrated, thus (re)shaping the landscape of the Atlantic sericulture. Weaving these treads more tightly into the narrative might have helped prove that commercial failures could also facilitate cultural hybridization. In general, Unravelled Dreams recovers the causes and consequences of a forgotten history, highlights contemporaries’ coping and compromising with contingencies, and, like all good books, inspires the readers to think and explore more into the story. Thus, while Marsh’s point of departure was a commercial failure, the unique perspective renders the book a success.","PeriodicalId":45977,"journal":{"name":"Enterprise & Society","volume":"23 1","pages":"286 - 288"},"PeriodicalIF":0.7000,"publicationDate":"2021-10-15","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Caley Horan. Insurance Era: Risk, Governance, and the Privatization of Security in Postwar America. Chicago: Chicago University Press, 2021. 264pp. ISBN 978-0-226-78438-0, $40.00 (cloth).\",\"authors\":\"Clarence Hatton-Proulx\",\"doi\":\"10.1017/eso.2021.45\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"waiting to be sewn into the fabric. Besides the social significance, Marsh also reconstructs Atlantic sericulture as a fascinating cultural space, such as its impact on early American nationalism. Unfortunately, the approach of the book also offers Marsh little help to thoroughly interpret the “intertwining of the international and the local” cultures (7). The diverse populations of silk workers brought distinctive religions, ideologies, and technologies into the Atlantic World. Marsh mentions the heterogeneous silk raisers, including Catholics, FrenchHuguenots, German speakers, Italian immigrants, and Scots-Irish Presbyterians, in Europe and theNewWorld. The author notices the collective modes of production within Meso-American communities and the Spanish Viceroy’s insistence on channeling the profits of sericulture to individual Native Americans (68–69, 74). He also touches on transnational networks of knowledge when discussing Jesuits’ transmittingAsian silkpractices toFranceorEzraStiles’s reading theories from China and Italy. However, the book seldom explicates whether or how the wild array of cultures and ideas clashed and integrated, thus (re)shaping the landscape of the Atlantic sericulture. Weaving these treads more tightly into the narrative might have helped prove that commercial failures could also facilitate cultural hybridization. In general, Unravelled Dreams recovers the causes and consequences of a forgotten history, highlights contemporaries’ coping and compromising with contingencies, and, like all good books, inspires the readers to think and explore more into the story. 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Caley Horan. Insurance Era: Risk, Governance, and the Privatization of Security in Postwar America. Chicago: Chicago University Press, 2021. 264pp. ISBN 978-0-226-78438-0, $40.00 (cloth).
waiting to be sewn into the fabric. Besides the social significance, Marsh also reconstructs Atlantic sericulture as a fascinating cultural space, such as its impact on early American nationalism. Unfortunately, the approach of the book also offers Marsh little help to thoroughly interpret the “intertwining of the international and the local” cultures (7). The diverse populations of silk workers brought distinctive religions, ideologies, and technologies into the Atlantic World. Marsh mentions the heterogeneous silk raisers, including Catholics, FrenchHuguenots, German speakers, Italian immigrants, and Scots-Irish Presbyterians, in Europe and theNewWorld. The author notices the collective modes of production within Meso-American communities and the Spanish Viceroy’s insistence on channeling the profits of sericulture to individual Native Americans (68–69, 74). He also touches on transnational networks of knowledge when discussing Jesuits’ transmittingAsian silkpractices toFranceorEzraStiles’s reading theories from China and Italy. However, the book seldom explicates whether or how the wild array of cultures and ideas clashed and integrated, thus (re)shaping the landscape of the Atlantic sericulture. Weaving these treads more tightly into the narrative might have helped prove that commercial failures could also facilitate cultural hybridization. In general, Unravelled Dreams recovers the causes and consequences of a forgotten history, highlights contemporaries’ coping and compromising with contingencies, and, like all good books, inspires the readers to think and explore more into the story. Thus, while Marsh’s point of departure was a commercial failure, the unique perspective renders the book a success.
期刊介绍:
Enterprise & Society offers a forum for research on the historical relations between businesses and their larger political, cultural, institutional, social, and economic contexts. The journal aims to be truly international in scope. Studies focused on individual firms and industries and grounded in a broad historical framework are welcome, as are innovative applications of economic or management theories to business and its context.