This dissertation examines the meaning of diamonds in imperial Britain in the nineteenth century and how Britain's involvement in diamond commodity chains across the century informed metropolitan consumers ' conception of and desire for diamond jewelry. It argues that knowledge about the conditions of production in colonial spaces and supply to the metropole increased diamond appreciation and, ultimately, consumption of diamond jewelry by white, middling- and upper-class Britons. Though predicated upon a useless luxury commodity, when economic depression struck in 1873, the diamond market remained relatively buoyant, thus enabling the growth of production and distribution monopolies in southern Africa and Europe. This fairly consi...
The developments that occurred as a result of the Industrial Revolution and during the British Empir...
This paper argues that the discovery of diamonds in South Africa in the late nineteenth century faci...
This dissertation examines thematic and formal engagements with excess in the literature and aesthet...
This dissertation examines the meaning of diamonds in imperial Britain in the nineteenth century and...
This dissertation examines the meaning of diamonds in imperial Britain in the nineteenth century and...
392 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2010.This work is based on a wide ...
392 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2010.This work is based on a wide ...
This dissertation investigates the cultural meaning ascribed to feminine fashionable objects such as...
This dissertation investigates the cultural meaning ascribed to feminine fashionable objects such as...
The thesis: British Victorian jewelry has the power to function as both subject matter and a point o...
This dissertation focuses on women, consumer culture, and crime in England in the early to later nin...
This thesis explores the relationship between imperial rhetoric and metaphors of literary production...
This paper analyses a small group of pieces of gold jewellery in order to explore the digger c...
During the birth of the diamond mining industry in South Africa, both black and white laborers in th...
This thesis examines the jewellery craft in Scotland between 1780 and 1914 with a focus on the rela...
The developments that occurred as a result of the Industrial Revolution and during the British Empir...
This paper argues that the discovery of diamonds in South Africa in the late nineteenth century faci...
This dissertation examines thematic and formal engagements with excess in the literature and aesthet...
This dissertation examines the meaning of diamonds in imperial Britain in the nineteenth century and...
This dissertation examines the meaning of diamonds in imperial Britain in the nineteenth century and...
392 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2010.This work is based on a wide ...
392 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2010.This work is based on a wide ...
This dissertation investigates the cultural meaning ascribed to feminine fashionable objects such as...
This dissertation investigates the cultural meaning ascribed to feminine fashionable objects such as...
The thesis: British Victorian jewelry has the power to function as both subject matter and a point o...
This dissertation focuses on women, consumer culture, and crime in England in the early to later nin...
This thesis explores the relationship between imperial rhetoric and metaphors of literary production...
This paper analyses a small group of pieces of gold jewellery in order to explore the digger c...
During the birth of the diamond mining industry in South Africa, both black and white laborers in th...
This thesis examines the jewellery craft in Scotland between 1780 and 1914 with a focus on the rela...
The developments that occurred as a result of the Industrial Revolution and during the British Empir...
This paper argues that the discovery of diamonds in South Africa in the late nineteenth century faci...
This dissertation examines thematic and formal engagements with excess in the literature and aesthet...