Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Contributors
- Preface
- List of Abbreviations
- I Material Transformations
- II Migration and Neighbourly Interactions
- III Overseas Travel
- Introduction
- 13 “How It Would Be to Walk On the New World with Feet from the Old”: Facing Otherness in Colonial America
- 14 Inscribing Indigeneity in the Colonial Landscape of New Sweden, 1638–1655
- 15 Men You Can Trust? Intercultural Trust and Masculinity in the Eyes of Swedes in 18th-Century Canton
- 16 The Barbary Coast and Ottoman Slavery in the Swedish Early Modern Imagination
- 17 A World of Distinctions: Pehr Löfling and the Meaning of Difference
- IV Conclusions
- Index
15 - Men You Can Trust? Intercultural Trust and Masculinity in the Eyes of Swedes in 18th-Century Canton
from III - Overseas Travel
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 July 2019
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Contributors
- Preface
- List of Abbreviations
- I Material Transformations
- II Migration and Neighbourly Interactions
- III Overseas Travel
- Introduction
- 13 “How It Would Be to Walk On the New World with Feet from the Old”: Facing Otherness in Colonial America
- 14 Inscribing Indigeneity in the Colonial Landscape of New Sweden, 1638–1655
- 15 Men You Can Trust? Intercultural Trust and Masculinity in the Eyes of Swedes in 18th-Century Canton
- 16 The Barbary Coast and Ottoman Slavery in the Swedish Early Modern Imagination
- 17 A World of Distinctions: Pehr Löfling and the Meaning of Difference
- IV Conclusions
- Index
Summary
This chapter uses the idea of trust to study intercultural interaction in 18th-century Canton. Focusing on the employees of the Swedish East India Company, it highlights the multitude of groups active in the foreign quarters, and the need for cultural adaptation there. Establishing trust entailed using certain language strategies and spaces to present oneself and evaluate others – practices intertwined with the construction of masculinity. In the trade environment of Canton, trust and distrust existed parallel to each other; there was neither complete cooperation nor competition. These realities afford a multifaceted image of the intercultural everyday life of 18th-century Swedish traders.
Eighteenth-century Canton was a key hub in the global trade network, and yet, all commercial contact was restricted to the small foreign quarters. In a place only a few kilometres long and wide, a multitude of traders from different places had to negotiate norms and learn local practices: in short, they had to make trade work. For most of the long 18th century, international trade worked quite well there: Chinese goods were exported to Europe, and silver flowed into the Qing Empire.
Smooth trade operations rely upon trust, and Canton was no exception in this regard. Foreigners and Chinese alike had to be able to rely on debts being paid, cargo being delivered and deadlines being met. In the words of the historian David Sunderland, trust can be defined as “an expectation, expressed in action and disappointed or fulfilled, that a partner will honour his implicit or explicit obligations.” Through the lens of trust, we can study the social environment of the foreign quarters of Canton, and even map some of the power hierarchies that emerged.
The aim of this chapter is to analyse how trust was established, negotiated and lost in the foreign quarters of 18th-century Canton. Firstly, attention is paid to the individuals between whom trust could be established, and secondly to the logistics of the process – the spaces, practices and strategies – used in negotiating and upholding trust. To establish trust with someone it was essential to present oneself in a specific way, while at the same time evaluating the person with whom one interacted. Establishing oneself as trustworthy was intertwined with the construction of gender, nationality, and class.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Facing Otherness in Early Modern SwedenTravel, Migration and Material Transformations 1500–1800, pp. 289 - 306Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2018