Boxing Venus: cowrie shell snuff boxes in the British Empire, 1680-1800
Author(s) | Ward, Alexandra | |
Date Accessioned | 2017-12-12T14:54:00Z | |
Date Available | 2017-12-12T14:54:00Z | |
Publication Date | 2017 | |
SWORD Update | 2017-09-05T16:31:17Z | |
Abstract | Admired for their striking beauty and lustrous surface, cowrie shells were harvested from reefs in the Pacific and sold in markets across the globe. This Master’s thesis explores the transpacific context of eighteenth-century tiger cowrie shell snuff box production, circulation, and consumption within the British Empire. Examining the whole history of cowrie shell boxes—from living organism to constructed box to object of social performance—highlights the impact of expanding global markets on the material culture and self-expression of people across the British Empire. | en_US |
Advisor | Dominguez Torres, Monica | |
Degree | M.A. | |
Department | University of Delaware, Winterthur Program in American Material Culture | |
Unique Identifier | 1015240144 | |
URL | http://udspace.udel.edu/handle/19716/21790 | |
Language | en | |
Publisher | University of Delaware | en_US |
URI | https://search.proquest.com/docview/1958949238?accountid=10457 | |
Keywords | Social sciences | en_US |
Keywords | Shells | en_US |
Keywords | Snuff box | en_US |
Keywords | Tiger cowrie | en_US |
Title | Boxing Venus: cowrie shell snuff boxes in the British Empire, 1680-1800 | en_US |
Type | Thesis | en_US |