Fr. 57.90

Acquired Tastes - Stories about the Origins of Modern Food

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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"The stories in this collection open a window onto those new categories in the making. Taken together, they call for new approaches to the history of global food, and using this history to think about our future"--

List of contents

Series Foreword
Introduction
Part I Time and Space
1 Tulare Lake and the Past Future of Food
2 A Biography of Modern British Bread
3 Old Is Bad, New Is American: Philippine Food Consumption and Production During American Empire in the Early 1900s
4 Does Your Beer Have Style? The Nineteenth-Century Invention of European Beer Styles
5 The Thin Ripe Line: Watermelons, Pushcarts, Distribution, and Decay
Part II Trust
6 Gilded Sugar and Corn Syrup's Long Con
7 The Search for the Average Consumer: Breakfast Cereal and the Industrialization of the American Food Supply
8 Eat the Rich: Radical Food Justice in Memphis and Chicago
9 Blackness and Bananas: The Josephine Baker Effect
10 Marion Harland, Tastemaker: How One Woman's Influence Helped Build an Industry
Part III Science
11 Who's Afraid of the Dark Sugar?
12 Darby's Fluid Meat, Digestion, and the British Imperial Food Supply
13 Ella Eaton Kellogg's Protose: Fake Meat and the Gender Politics That Made American Vegetarianism Modern
14 Marietta's Lamb
Epilogue
Acknowledgements
Contributors
Index

About the author

Benjamin R. Cohen is Associate Professor at Lafayette College and the author of Pure Adulteration: Cheating on Nature in the Age of Manufactured Food. Michael S. Kideckel teaches history at Princeton Day School and is the author of the forthcoming Fresh from the Factory: Breakfast Cereal, Natural Food, and the Marketing of Reform, 1890-1920. Anna Zeide is Associate Professor of History and  Director of Food Studies at Virginia Tech. She is the author of Canned: The Rise and Fall of Consumer Confidence in the American Food Industry, winner of the 2019 James Beard Award in Reference, History and Scholarship.

Summary

How modern food helped make modern society between 1870 and 1930: stories of power and food, from bananas and beer to bread and fake meat.

The modern way of eating—our taste for food that is processed, packaged, and advertised—has its roots as far back as the 1870s. Many food writers trace our eating habits to World War II, but this book shows that our current food system began to coalesce much earlier. Modern food came from and helped to create a society based on racial hierarchies, colonization, and global integration. Acquired Tastes explores these themes through a series of moments in food history—stories of bread, beer, sugar, canned food, cereal, bananas, and more—that shaped how we think about food today.
            Contributors consider the displacement of native peoples for agricultural development; the invention of Pilsner, the first international beer style; the “long con” of gilded sugar and corn syrup; Josephine Baker’s banana skirt and the rise of celebrity tastemakers; and faith in institutions and experts who produced, among other things, food rankings and fake meat.

Product details

Authors Benjamin R Cohen, Benjamin R. Cohen, Cohen Benjamin R., Michael S Kideckel, Michael S. Kideckel, Michael S. Kideckel, A Zeide, Anna Zeide
Assisted by Benjamin R. Cohen (Editor), Michael S. Kideckel (Editor), Anna Zeide (Editor)
Publisher The MIT Press
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 17.08.2021
 
EAN 9780262542913
ISBN 978-0-262-54291-3
No. of pages 290
Dimensions 154 mm x 230 mm x 17 mm
Series Food, Health, and the Environment
Subjects Guides > Food & drink
Non-fiction book > Politics, society, business > Politics

COOKING / General, Cookery / food & drink etc, Cookery / food and drink / food writing

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