The epic history of consumption, and the goods that have transformed our lives over the past 600 years.
Frank Trentmann is Professor of History at Birkbeck, University of London, and at the University of Helsinki. He is the author of Empire of Things and Free Trade Nation, and has been awarded the Whitfield Prize, the Austrian Science Book Prize, and the Humboldt Prize for Research, and was a Moore Scholar at Caltech. He grew up in Hamburg and lives in London.
a monumental work that deserves a wide audience. It is both a
highly engaging global history of consumer culture and a masterful
synthesis of a vast body of literature ... There are few truly
global histories of consumer culture, and no study is as meticulous
or comprehensive. ... In sum, Frank Trentmann's Empire of Things is
a masterpiece of historical analysis that offers a wealth of
insights into material desire, changing social norms, state
policies, transnational connectivity, and other themes in the
history of consumption. Indeed, Empire of Things is a
field-defining work that will surely be the standard by which
global histories of consumption are measured.
*American Historical Review*
Utterly fascinating ... What makes Trentmann's book such a pleasure
to read is not just the wealth of detail or the staggering
international range, but the refreshing absence of moaning or
moralising about our supposed addiction to owning more stuff
*Sunday Times*
You can't not learn something new here ... [An] epic tale
*Independent*
A history not merely of consumption (and attitudes toward
consumption) but also of the very idea of goods as a thing to be
produced and consumed. Every page fascinates
*Bloomberg*
I read Empire Of Things with unflagging fascination ... [Trentmann]
is not only an elegant, adventurous and colourful writer, he also
manages the tricky balancing act of being eminently sensible and
gleefully provocative
*Daily Mail*
Laden with fascinating insights and accounts, the result no doubt
of extensive research, this study spans not only six centuries and
numerous civilisations, cultures and individuals but also finds
time to comment on the beginnings, direction and outcomes of
consumerism itself. This is a hugely impressive undertaking and an
ambitious narrative
*Irish Times*
A monumental book on a monumental subject ... Rich and illuminating
... No-one who reads it will think about consumer society in the
same way
*Revista de Libros*
[Empire of Things] is wider in scope geographically, historically
and socially than anything preceding it ... The epilogue to this
story of consumption is salutary: history is essential to our
understanding of the continuing rise in material consumption far
beyond a sustainable level
*Ethical Consumer*
Jam-packed with telling facts and counterintuitive provocations ...
Empire of Things is that rare tour d'horizon that expands your
sense of what should count as the subject ... A bracing
argument
*New York Review of Books*
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