Books > History > World history > 1750 to 1900
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Eating the Empire - Food and Society in Eighteenth-Century Britain (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R760
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Eating the Empire - Food and Society in Eighteenth-Century Britain (Hardcover)
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When students gathered in a London coffeehouse and smoked tobacco,
Yorkshire women sipped sugar-infused tea, or a Glasgow family ate a
bowl of Indian curry, were they aware of the mechanisms of imperial
rule and trade that made such goods readily available? In Eating
the Empire, Troy Bickham unfolds the extraordinary role that food
played in shaping Britain during the `long' eighteenth century (c.
1660-1837), when coffee, tea, and sugar went from rare luxuries to
some of the most ubiquitous commodities in Britain, reaching even
the poorest and remotest of households. Bickham reveals how the
trade in the empire's edibles underpinned the emerging consumer
economy, fomenting the rise of modern retailing, visual advertising
and consumer credit, and, via taxes, financed the military and
civil bureaucracy that secured, governed and spread the empire.
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