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The World’s Most Valuable Fabric
Silk. There are few fabrics with a greater reputation for luxury or a more storied past. Produced for thousands of years, the Silk Road brought silk from China to Europe during Roman times. It is one of the most beautiful and strongest fibers in the world.
Silk: A World History, by Aarathi Prasad, tells the story of silk. It explains its origins, discusses its production and shows its impact throughout history in three parts. The first discusses silk produced by moths. The second examines other sources of natural silk. The third takes the story through the late 19th century to the present, including its uses and synthesis attempts.
The oldest forms of silk come from moths. Prasad examines the history of the silkworm, starting before its domestication 4000 years ago. She shows how Chinese farmers harvested wild silkworm cocoons 7500 to 5000 years ago and wove their silk into cloth. She shows how this moth, now known as the Bombyx, was domesticated, and how an industry that eventually spread worldwide grew around them.
The Bombyx is not the only moth discussed in this section. She also examines silks produced by wild (and semi-domesticated) moths native to India and Africa. Along the way, she introduces individuals prominent in the study of silk, and the insects that produce them.
The book goes beyond moths. In the second section, Prasad reveals other historic sources of silk. The pinna nobilis, a now nearly-extinct mollusk, had been the source of “byssus” silk since at least Roman times. It also shows how spider silk was harvested starting in the 16th century, and the various attempts to create a spider silk industry from the extremely strong fabric it yields.
Finally, she examines the various uses of silk beyond simple clothing. Silk has a unique combination of strength and lightness. She shows how the Mongols used silk undergarments as armor and how the first bulletproof vest was created from silk in the early 20th century. It is used in sutures and to stop bleeding. Spider silk proved invaluable in crosshairs for astronomical telescopes and gunsights. It also presents modern attempts to create synthetic spider silk through gene splicing.
Silk is a fascinating book on many levels. While a comprehensive scientific look at silk, it is also an adventure story. It tells as much about the explorers seeking to unravel silk’s mysteries as it does about the material itself.
“Silk: A World History,” by Aarathi Prasad, William Morrow, April, 2024, 304 pages, $32.50 (Hardcover), $15.99 (e-book)
This review was written by Mark Lardas who writes at Ricochet as Seawriter. Mark Lardas, an engineer, freelance writer, historian, and model-maker, lives in League City, TX. His website is marklardas.com. It appeared in a different form in Epoch Times.
Published in Book Reviews
It is amazing to me that we still cannot make it. Nature is still ahead of us .
Apparently we are beginning to make artificial silk. It is discussed in one of the closing chapters. Problem is it is way more expensive than natural silk.
Does the book get into the silk/mulberry farming craze that was a popular get-rich scheme in the Great Lakes region in the 1830s? Maybe it was more widespread than that, but it ended up like a lot of popular get-rich fads.
It does.
The great philosopher Mencius advised kings to have mulberry trees planted on farms of a certain size because silkworms like the leaves; that way all the people would be able to wear silk.
Dang. I’ll have to get this book then. I’ve always wanted to learn more about that, in context.
As I recall it only touches on it as part of a greater silk craze during the period.
Seeing as I am a native GA boy, I am more of a cotton man.
The Fabric of Civilization: How Textiles Made the World by Virginia Postrel is an interesting book on textiles in general.
She was on EconTalk and had a great interview. I didn’t put it on my reading list at the time. Thanks for the reminder of a good book.
Yeah, it’s not the sort of topic I would have thought about buying a book on, but hearing her pitch it on a podcast made me realize this is a more interesting topic than I would have suspected.
I reviewed The Fabric of Civilization on Ricochet four years ago. (Boy have I been doing this a long time.) You can read the review here.
I wonder what overlap there might be with Women’s Work: The First 20,000 Years : Women, Cloth, and Society in Early Times (1996) by Elizabeth Wayland Barber. Somebody on Ricochet recommended it to me several years ago. It was good.