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A History of Bread: Consumers, Bakers and Public Authorities since the 18th Century: Food in Modern History: Traditions and Innovations

Autor Peter Scholliers
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 7 feb 2024
For a long time, everything revolved around bread. Providing more than half of people's daily calories, bread was the life-source of Europe for centuries. In the middle of 19th century, a third of household expenditure was spent on bread. Why, then, does it only account for 0.8% of expenditure and just 12% of daily calories today?In this book, Peter Scholliers delves into the history of bread to map out its defining moments and people. From the price revolution of the 1890s that led to affordable and pure white bread, to the taste revolution of the 1990s that ushered in healthy brown bread, he studies consumers, bakers and governments to explain how and why this food that once powered an entire continent has fallen by the wayside, and what this means for the modern age. From prices and consumption to legislation and technology, Scholliers shows how the history of bread has been shaped by subtle cultural shifts as well as top-down decisions from ruling bodies. From the small home baker to booming factories, he follows changes in agriculture, transport, production and policy since the 19th century to explain why bread, once the centre of everything, is not so today.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781350361768
ISBN-10: 1350361763
Pagini: 296
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.46 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria Food in Modern History: Traditions and Innovations

Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Caracteristici

Uses bread to illustrate the social tensions, economy and cultural implications of an industrialising and urbanising society

Notă biografică

Peter Scholliers is Emeritus Professor of the History at Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium. An expert in the economic, social and cultural history of food in Europe since the 1750s, he is the co-editor in chief of Food & History and co-series editor of Bloomsbury's Food in Modern History series. He has edited and authored many publications in the field including A Cultural History of Food, Writing Food History and Food Culture in Belgium.

Cuprins

Introduction Part I: The Consumer 1. Eating Bread 2. Types of Bread3. Prices and Purchasing power4. Acquiring Bread: Baking, Buying and Stealing 5. Calories, Kilos and Grams6. Bad bread: Fraud, Additives and Riots Part II: The Baker7. Artisanal Baking8. Technology and Hygiene 9. The Factories 10. Wages, Costs and Profits 11. Image, Status and Wealth12. Politics, Strikes and Consultations Part III: The Government 13. Grain Policy14. Price Control15. Fraud on the Track 16. School and Education 17. Committees, Councils, Institutes and Agencies Conclusion: Good Bread Glossary Bibliography Appendices Index

Recenzii

Bread, a name that tastes ancient and "natural". But bread does not exist in nature. Since it was invented it has been a symbol of innovation and creativity. Bread is the perfect food, designed by humans for humans. After millennia, it continues to hold the secret of humanity.
In a masterful and lively study, as rigorous as it is graceful, Scholliers insists on the essential : bread is at the core of public and private life, as much a political and social as a nutritional and gastronomical object, a powerful force of and for life, yet also a reminder of its fragility.
Bread was, for centuries, the staple of most Europeans' diets. Here Peter Scholliers weaves together economic and medical histories, the daily lives of workers, the histories of technology and consumption, to demonstrate how a simple item like a loaf of bread can trace historical change in all its complexity.