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 <title>all Sven Beckert stories</title>
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 <title>Beckert tracks cotton trail</title>
 <link>http://harvardscience.harvard.edu/culture-society/articles/beckert-tracks-cotton-trail</link>
 <description>&lt;!--paging_filter--&gt;&lt;p&gt;Sven Beckert, a professor of history with an expertise in 19th  century America, is hoping to understand the roots of the global  economic ties that bind the world today by looking at one of the  first truly global products: cotton.
&lt;p&gt;&quot;Once upon a time, it was the most important agricultural  product, the most important export, and the most important  industry,&quot; Beckert said. &quot;This is a history of globalization  through the lens of one commodity.&quot;
&lt;p&gt;Cotton is a particularly apt product to focus on because it was  largely produced in Asia until the 19th century, Beckert said.  During the 1800s, however, cotton production, processing, and  manufacturing moved west into the United States and Europe,  until Asia was largely marginalized in the cotton world.
&lt;p&gt;This was part of a split between East and West that led to the  industrialized West gaining the vast economic power that is still  felt around the globe today.
&lt;p&gt;&quot;I&#039;m interested in how the world took the shape it did in the 19th  century,&quot; Beckert said.
&lt;p&gt;Beckert plans to publish his research in a book, &quot;The Empire of  Cotton: A Global History,&quot; though he is still completing the  writing.&lt;/p&gt;
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 <pubDate>Mon, 26 Mar 2007 05:42:27 -0400</pubDate>
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