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  2. Textile Ascendancies: Aesthetics, Production, and Trade in Northern Nigeria

Textile Ascendancies: Aesthetics, Production, and Trade in Northern Nigeria

Elisha P. Renne and Salihu Maiwada, Editors 2020
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Until this century, Northern Nigeria was a major center of textile production and trade. Textile Ascendancies: Aesthetics, Production, and Trade in Northern Nigeria examines this dramatic change in textile aesthetics, technologies, and social values in order to explain the extraordinary shift in textile demand, production, and trade.

Textile Ascendancies provides information for the study of the demise of textile manufacturing outside Nigeria. The book also suggests the conundrum considered by George Orwell concerning the benefits and disadvantages of "mechanical progress," and digital progress, for human existence. While textile mill workers in northern Nigeria were proud to participate in the mechanization of weaving, the "tendency for the mechanization of the world" represented by more efficient looms and printing equipment in China has contributed to the closing of Nigerian mills and unemployment.

Textile Ascendancies will appeal toanthropologists for its analyses of social identity as well as how the ethnic identity of consumers influences continued handwoven textile production. The consideration of aesthetics and fashionable dress will appeal to specialists in textiles and clothing. It will be useful to economic historians for the comparative analysis of textile manufacturing decline in the 21st century. It will also be of interest to those thinking about global futures, about digitalization, and how new ways of making cloth and clothing may provide both employment and environmentally sound production practices.

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Series
  • African Perspectives
ISBN(s)
  • 978-0-472-12663-7 (ebook)
  • 978-0-472-05444-2 (paper)
  • 978-0-472-07444-0 (hardcover)
Subject
  • Art:Art Theory
  • African Studies
  • Economics
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  • Table of Contents

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  • Cover
  • Title Page
  • Copyright Page
  • Dedication
  • Contents
  • Acknowledgments
  • Preface
  • Introduction
  • Chapter 1
  • Chapter 2
  • Chapter 3
  • Chapter 4
  • Chapter 5
  • Chapter 6
  • Chapter 7
  • Chapter 8
  • Epilogue
  • Appendix
  • Contributors
  • Index

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  • Kano4
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  • Hassan, Hannatu3
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Fig06_01. Women’s outfit made of cloth depicting interlocking rings with imitation embroidery along the sleeve edges.

Women's dress with Chinese materials, Kano

From Chapter 6

Fig. 6.1. Women’s dress top and wrapper, made with textile materials imported from China, with imitation of embroidery along the sleeve edges, November 2017, Kano. (Photograph by Hannatu Hassan.)

Kano market scene with men unloading wax-print textile bundles.

Kantin Kwari market textile traders

From Chapter 6

Kantin Kwari market scene, with lorry off-loading wax print textile bundles, Unity Road, July 2013, Kano (photograph by Hannatu Hassan).

Textile trader-broker in Kano market shop.

Textile-trader-broker Shafi'u Abdulkadir

From Chapter 6

Textile trader-broker, Alhaji Shafi’u Abdulkadir, 2017, Kano (photograph by Hannatu Hassan).

Large warehouses used for storing textiles near Kano market.

Textile warehouses Kano

From Chapter 6

Large warehouses used for storing textiles near Kantin Kwari market, November 2012, Kano (photograph by Elisha Renne).

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