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Plumes: Ostrich Feathers, Jews, and a Lost World of Global Commerce [Hardcover]

Sarah Abrevaya Stein PhD (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

November 25, 2008

The thirst for exotic ornament among fashionable women in the metropoles of Europe and America prompted a bustling global trade in ostrich feathers that flourished from the 1880s until the First World War. When feathers fell out of fashion with consumers, the result was an economic catastrophe for many, a worldwide feather bust. In this remarkable book, Sarah Stein draws on rich archival materials to bring to light the prominent and varied roles of Jews in the feather trade. She discovers that Jews fostered and nurtured the trade across the global commodity chain and throughout the far-flung territories where ostriches were reared and plucked, and their feathers were sorted, exported, imported, auctioned, wholesaled, and finally manufactured for sale.

From Yiddish-speaking Russian-Lithuanian feather handlers in South Africa to London manufacturers and wholesalers, from rival Sephardic families whose feathers were imported from the Sahara and traded across the Mediterranean, from New York’s Lower East Side to entrepreneurial farms in the American West, Stein explores the details of a remarkably vibrant yet ephemeral culture. This is a singular story of global commerce, colonial economic practices, and the rise and fall of a glamorous luxury item. (20081119)


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Editorial Reviews

Review

“In this innovative and intriguing book, Stein zeroes in on one colonial commodity—ostrich feathers—and produces the first coherent history of their production and trade. This book is in conversation with, and contributes to, many fields, including colonialism, economic history, and Jewish history.”—Derek J. Penslar, professor of history, University of Toronto and author of Shylock''s Children: Economics and Jewish Identity in Modern Europe
(Derek J. Penslar 20100127)

“One of the most imaginative books in modern Jewish history that I have read in a very long time.”—Todd Endelman, professor of history, University of Michigan
(Todd Endelman )

"Sarah Abrevaya Stein''s meticulously researched Plumes is delightfully intriguing in its detail—a forgotten page of Jewish history that shows the lengths enterprising people will go to for a difficult but profitable niche market."—Mark Kurlansky, author of SALT: A World History
(Mark Kurlansky )

"Plumes—in part the chronicle of a craze in early 20th-century millinery—speaks to our current moment of financial cataclysm. . . . Even though Plumes is a study of fluff, [Stein''s] book is solidly grounded in scholarship."—Stephen Birmingham, Wall Street Journal
(Stephen Birmingham Wall Street Journal )

"Assorted histories—world, fashion, economic, Jewish—converge in this fluent account of an esoteric trade and its far-flung principals."—The Atlantic
(The Atlantic )

"Stein''s book is fascinating (who knew there was an ostrich-feather bubble?) as well as prescient (over-reliance on credit, neglecting to diversify your assets, the belief that a commodity will never, ever lose value—sounds vaguely familiar). And she maintains that tricky balance between engrossing historical narrative and cultural theory."—Raquel Laneri, Forbes.com
(Raquel Laneri Forbes.com )

“I loved this book. I knew nothing about the subject, but Sarah Stein … kept me going right to the last page … her comprehensive, meticulous, and fascinating history … [is] a vast subject, which she admirably outlines in straightforward language . . .  terrific . . .” — Jonathan Mirksy, Literary Review
(Jonathan Mirksy Literary Review )

Winner of the 2010 Sami Rohr Prize for Jewish Literature sponsored by the Jewish Book Council
(The Sami Rohr Prize for Jewish Literature Jewish Book Council )

"[A] captivating book. . . . Amid a raft of commodity histories, Plumes is a rare bird: in flight between cultural and economic history, conceptually expansive, and possessed of an artfully built archival nest."—Deborah Cohen, Journal of Modern History
(Deborah Cohen Journal of Modern History )

"Plumes makes extremely valuable contributions to Jewish history, economic history, and cultural history. [The book] succeeds admirably and eloquently both as historiographic exhortation and historical evocation, richly bringing life to lost worlds of commerce and culture."—Paul Lerner, H-Judaic
(Paul Lerner H-Judaic )

About the Author

Sarah Abrevaya Stein is Professor and Maurice Amado Chair in Sephardic Studies, Department of History, UCLA.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Yale University Press (November 25, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0300127367
  • ISBN-13: 978-0300127362
  • Product Dimensions: 9.4 x 6.2 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,140,502 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Feathers and Folly, March 5, 2009
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This review is from: Plumes: Ostrich Feathers, Jews, and a Lost World of Global Commerce (Hardcover)
Why is it that diamonds are regarded as high value and feathers are not? It seems like a silly question, unless one takes into account the foibles of human enthusiasms and the price tags we put on them. One hundred years ago, ostrich feathers were worth almost as much by weight as diamonds, and businessmen argued that they were equivalent in durability. A fine ostrich feather was "an investment for life" wrote one observer at the time, and went on that the plume "has been in fashion for centuries past, and will probably be for centuries to come. It holds its place like the diamond." Ostrich feathers have, of course, faded from fashion, but any bubble can make an interesting study of human behavior. Sarah Abrevaya Stein has done that, and more, in _Plumes: Ostrich Feathers, Jews, and a Lost World of Global Commerce_ (Yale University Press). Stein, a professor who concentrates on Jewish Studies, takes a look at this episode which has not only been forgotten but its Jewish origins have been forgotten, too. _Plumes_ is an academic treatise, full of footnotes and wide research, but the peculiarity of its topic makes it funny and sad as well. Not only that, but studying of the feather bust is probably healthful for those of us a hundred years later who have our own economic woes.

Feathers had adorned hats and clothes for centuries, but in the 1880s they became a fashion essential, used on women's large, elaborate hats and on boas. The South African trade in ostrich feathers was coincident with the boom of the area in diamond and gold mines. Stein shows that Jewish workers, traders, manufacturers, and financiers were all involved in the feather trade. Her review shows that this was a process of history rather than any coordinated Jewish effort; Jews had spread out and had mercantile, lingual, and industrial skills that could flourish in new areas. "Jews brought certain elements of human capital to the ostrich feather trade: background in like industries, contacts of kith and kin within and across sub-ethnic diasporas and political and oceanic boundaries, copacetic relations with the reigning authorities, geographic mobility, and, no less important, economic need." That there could be this sort of Jewish involvement made it almost inevitable that some would use it as a focus for anti-Semitic thought, but it is hard to see any great conspiracy at this remove, especially since any such conspiracy would have to be one of the least successful ever. Before the bust things looked bright indeed. The harvesting and preparation of the feathers was surprisingly complicated, and the industry employed thousands. A big problem for American ostrich feather manufacturers was that there were import duties to be paid on feathers from London, so that ostrich farms sprang up in the South and Southwest. Governmental aid for such farms was sought, one Arizona representative declaring to his colleagues in the House in 1913, "No one need have any fear for the future of the ostrich industry. The feather is undoubtedly the most beautiful ornament of its kind, and as such is independent of fashion."

Counting on continued demand proved to be an unwarranted gamble. There were various reasons for the bust, beyond the mere capriciousness of Dame Fashion. There was a nascent preservationist movement which sought laws to halt the obliteration of wild birds at home and overseas, and laws were passed to protect them and their feathers. Ostriches, of course, were domesticated birds in no danger of extinction, but when the public started linking feathers and cruelty or extinction, ostrich feathers were included. World War One influenced women to dress practically to enter the workforce. The automobile made wearing big, feathered hats or boas impractical. Brokerage firms that had invested in feathers, and those that had stockpiled large amounts in order to take advantage of an expected upsurge in value, were ruined. The downfall provided some humor in the popular press, which suggested an ostrich for the Thanksgiving table ("Heaven help him who gets the neck."). There was a short relief from a fad of dressing kewpie dolls in feathers, and eventually some of the stock got turned into less-than-haute-couture feather dusters. This is a story of "livelihoods lost to the caprice of global markets," and any twenty-first century reader is going to find familiar its themes of luxury, greed, and economic chaos.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars fascinating thorough work, January 12, 2009
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This review is from: Plumes: Ostrich Feathers, Jews, and a Lost World of Global Commerce (Hardcover)
I write this without the book because I have given it away as a prize in a raffle, I think so much of it. The research was particularly thorough - the footnotes are as interesting as the text. I liked this book better than any other thesis turned into a book because it is so well written - her rhythm, vocabulary and personal voice are all excellent. The material is particularly fascinating, especially as I have an ostrich feather fan and a single plume inherited from my great-grandmother, and I am sure that people tried to establish ostrich farms in Australia before WW1, just as the South African farmers took our - South Australian - wattle seed at that time and set up wattle farms for the bark used in tanning, and killed an industry here because they had cheap (slave) labour.

But her main argument - that the Jews who ran the industry were particularly suited to it through the training they had received in similar European industries, because of the Jewish diaspora and because of the opportunities they had to set up an industry from the beginning and all the way along, that their languages - Yiddish and Judaeo-Arabic - allowed them to communicate with others significant to the trade - I loved this argument, answering the implicit anti-Semitism of any comment on Jewish control of any industry. The thinking, knowledge and wisdom of that position are inspirational, and evoke my gratitude. And my admiration. This is such an excellent work.

And she illustrates this argument with detailed knowledge of the industry, drawn from its records and personal letters, showing its development through Africa (I wanted to know more about the desert camel trains, carrying huge bags of feathers) and the development of the markets, in Europe and America, through family and relationship contacts.

i heartily recommend this book - I loved it.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful history, April 6, 2010
This review is from: Plumes: Ostrich Feathers, Jews, and a Lost World of Global Commerce (Hardcover)
This is both a history of the ostrich feather trade, and also a history of the Jews throughout Northern Africa and also South Africa. Hard to belive that Ostrich feathers were as valuable as diamonds early in the 20th century. Wonderful read.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
feather exporters, feather handlers, feather buyers, feather commerce, ostrich feather industry, ostrich feather trade, feather bust, ostrich feather market, feather manufacturers, feather manufacturing, feather boom, feather auctions, feather crash, ostrich feather business, feather traders, feather workers, ostrich industry, feather sales, feather world, ostrich farmers, feather factories, industrial niche, feather merchants, ostrich farming, feather game
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, South Africa, Cawston Farm, North Africa, United States, Cawston Ostrich Farm, Cape Colony, Isaac Nurick, Mediterranean Jewish, American West, Isach Hassan, Oudtshoorn District, Eastern European Jews, Western Cape, Cape Town, Livornese Jewish, Alfred Mosely, Mediterranean Jews, Cecil Botibol, Los Angeles, Trade Board, Lower East Side, Nel Museum, West Africa, Russian Empire
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