Friday, August 13, 2010
Sweetness and Power: The Place of Sugar in Modern History by Sidney W. Mintz
This book presents a history of sugar. While in some ways I found it to be somewhat Anglo-centric, it was a really fascinating account of the rise of sugar as a form of food. It's Mintz's contention that sugar and the patterns of consumption that surround it are not accidental or arbitrary, but instead the result of larger economic patterns. I found the production and eating and being chapters particularly helpful--Mintz talks about the way that sugar's chemical properties (especially in preserving food) and its historical circumstances have changed the way we eat--and thus the way that we relate to each other. This book is really remarkable.
Labels:
agriculture,
Caribbean,
commodity,
economics,
England,
ethnography/anthropology,
food,
history,
industry,
politics,
race,
slavery,
sugar,
United States
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