Abstract

This paper offers a historical analysis of cultural identification among locals and cosmopolitans in Amsterdam, the centre of the seventeenth century world system. Here, the convergence of global processes and local changes, such as increasing monetization, commodification and anonymization of everyday lives generated conditions that contributed to the formation of modern individual and group identities. Early modern globalization gave rise to a “global animus” in Amsterdam and it prompted the city’s political elites to promote a cosmopolitan civic identity, expressed in allegoric art and architecture. On a theoretical level this paper criticizes objectifying or essentializing approaches to cultural globalization and to cultural identity and highlights instead the contradictions and ambiguities involved in the processes of attributing cultural meaning. A discussion of the poetry of Jacob Cats (1577–1660) reveals how local actors attributed contesting cultural meanings to the objects of global trade and how they acculturated them in different ways into their practices of local or cosmopolitan identification.

Highlights

  • Global systemic dynamics have been connecting and have been impacting upon localities at least ever since the early modern period and they have played a constitutive role in bringing about the rise of modern identities

  • The following analysis links approaches and concepts from the fields of economic and cultural history as well as from social anthropology in order to examine how the opening of a locality to global interconnectedness has impacted on identity practices and cultural change in an early modern centre of globalization

  • Identity formation in an early modern centre of world trade like Amsterdam was strongly influenced by those material and symbolic linkages that connected this locality to its global exteriority

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Summary

Introduction

Global systemic dynamics have been connecting and have been impacting upon localities at least ever since the early modern period and they have played a constitutive role in bringing about the rise of modern identities. Cities in particular have been nodes of global economic exchange, of migration and of knowledge transfers These convergences have provided advantageous conditions for the commercialized and individualized social formations of modern merchant cultures (Goody 2004). The following analysis links approaches and concepts from the fields of economic and cultural history as well as from social anthropology in order to examine how the opening of a locality to global interconnectedness has impacted on identity practices and cultural change in an early modern centre of globalization. Before this paper sets out to analyze the impact of early modern globalization on individual and group identities in Amsterdam it will be necessary to situate this approach of historical anthropology to globalization and cultural identity in the wider field of globalization studies

Globalizations in History and Historiography
Civic Identity and the “Global Animus” in Early Modern Amsterdam
Cosmopolitans and Locals within and without the Global City
An Early Modern Cosmopolitan Consumer
Conclusion
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