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Learn to COOK - Sweetness and Power: The Place of Sugar in Modern History

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List Price: $16.00
Our Price: $10.88
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Manufacturer: Penguin (Non-Classics)
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Binding: Paperback Dewey Decimal Number: 394.12 EAN: 9780140092332 ISBN: 0140092331 Label: Penguin (Non-Classics) Manufacturer: Penguin (Non-Classics) Number Of Items: 1 Number Of Pages: 274 Publication Date: 1986-08-05 Publisher: Penguin (Non-Classics) Studio: Penguin (Non-Classics)
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Want to Brush Your Teeth More Often Comment: Quick Summary:
Unlike many anthropologists out there, Sydney Mintz' style is quite accessible for the casual reader. In this particular book he takes us through the genealogy of sugar and begins to dissect that refined white stuff we put in our coffees and teas for what it originally was--a medicine or spice. He then walks us through shifts in the "meanings" of sugar as we began to develop a whole economy (around this very substance) and this economy, still exists today in the system we call "capitalism". In so doing this we learn of triangles of trade, the rising proletariat in England and, their mirror image, slaves in the Caribbean, the British 'sweet tooth' and much more.
Little Review:
This 86-year old anthropologist who still works as a research professor at John Hopkins University tells a wonderful story that anyone who can read should read. It will make you want to brush your teeth. It will make you want to ease your sugar habits, but most of all, it will cause you to reconsider your views on slave labor in the Americas.
Mintz, does have some theoretical things to say in this book, but for the less casual reader, you might feel as if he was lacking here. Most obvious in terms of this, was his small, but interesting discussions of power. For a nice complement to this book, I suggest seeing the film Sugar Cane Alley, which I have also reviewed. Sugar Cane Alley
Customer Rating:      Summary: Interesting insight into history of a food that we take for granted Comment: Someone scribbled the following on the first page of the introduction of my copy of this book: "NOTE: this work may be of marginal use!!" I disagree.
Sugar is such a heavily-used part of most diets, yet we rarely stop to reflect how it came to be that way. Our dependence on sugar is surely not healthy, yet it is incredibly hard to wean oneself from sugaring so much of what we eat. I found Mintz's discussion on the history of the production and consumption patterns of sugar to be interesting, and the repercussions to our social structures to be even more so. This is still a timely read given the current reflection on the nature of world markets.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Unique Comment: Sidney Mintz is a worldly and humane scholar whose
investigation of the role of sugar in the development
of the modern world turns out to be three seperate books.
The first, and most understandable might be called the
History of Sugar Consumption. This is his story of the
meaning attached to sweetness in the western world and how
that meaning changed as sugar became more widely available.
The second, could be called the Power of Sweetness. It is
his unravelling of the close connection between sugar
consumption and the Industrial Era. In this 'book' he credits
the primate love of sweetness, the high caloric yield of
sugar and the lowering prices that efficient production
created with establishing sugar's central place at our tables.
The third book is an attempt to relate sugar to questions of
imperial and class ambitions, power politics and economic
issues. For this reader, at least, these questions seem to
ride along on the coattails of the innate appeal of sugar
as a food, especially in places where wine is expensive and
stimulant drinks prevalent. In short, the arguement of this
third book seems like an attempt to turn the second book on
its head.
Now, I'm told that anthropologists these days like to talk
that way, that they prefer to believe in the power of
institutions rather than the appeal of things. Interesting,
and I think for many ordinary readers, incomprehensible.
None the less, if you leave the occasional theoretical
oddity aside, this is a wonderfully put together story,
provocatively told.
--Lynn Hoffman, author of THE NEW SHORT COURSE IN WINE and
the forthcoming novel bang BANG from Kunati Books.ISBN
9781601640005
Customer Rating:      Summary: Bitter Sweet Comment: Mintz provides a fascinating history of sugar, placing it in context within the transatlantic world. Sugar acquired ever increasing importance as the means for its production improved, its availability spread and its price decreased. Underpinning the success of sugar was the tragedy of slavery. Not only did slaves serve the sugar plantations and mills, but Mintz makes a compelling case for sugar's being the single key force behind the firm establishment of black slavery in the western hemisphere.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Political Economy Canon; A Classic That Remade Anthropology and Cultural Studies Comment: Sidney W. Mintz's Sweetness and Power situates economic analysis in consumption rather than production. The author believes that a producer's labor and exploitation is not enough to understand the exploitation of production. One must unpack the mythos of demand. Central to this is the idea that rational choice leads liberal individuals to consume products because it is in their best interest. Mintz correctly implies that in the historiography of western consumers and colonial producers, this liberal individual is almost always white, male, and couched in the trappings of "civilization." He criticizes prevailing practices in social anthropology that approach colonized peoples as pristine and discrete, a tendency that also has troubling sway over what he terms "anthropology of modern life." He sees the anthropology rooted in his study of a basic commodity-sugar-as a positive contestation of the bounded primitive as a mode of inquiry and one that connects rather than marginalizes its subjects.
Mintz's engagement with cultural anthropology is based on a sophisticated premise: the way in which canonical anthropology marginalizes the primitive in opposition to civil society is related to the way in which liberal economics marginalizes the producer in opposition to the liberal individual consumer. The term "in opposition to" is appropriate because in this marginalization, both ends are mutually decentered. Both the primitive and the civil as well as production and consumption are on the margins because there is a labor, an exploitation, and an invocation to behavior that defies logic on each end. This, Mintz implies, necessitates a rejection of the prevailing colonial narrative of one-way dominion. For him, the mass-consumption of sugar is an anthropological anomaly. This is the puzzle that leads him to root his study in England from roughly 1650 thru 1900, during which time sugar went from being a lavish luxury to a staple of working class diets. As he notes, there is ample anthropological precedent to model culture and society as resistant to change and resistant to the imposition of new practice and tradition, even amidst a changing milieu that raises contradictions. Thus, contrary to liberal economic theory, demand is not a matter of nature in which rational persons severed from cultural meaning rush toward rational hedonistic consumption with open arms. Indeed, anthropology suggests that nature resists this imposition of change. Because of this, demand must be a structural phenomenon. It must at some juncture interrupt and structure culture in a way that is alien to its natural progression. The author concludes that production must create cultural meaning.
Understanding demand as structure and not nature allows there to be a liminal space between production and consumption. For Mintz, sugar inscribes a genealogy of contact upon this space. He sees the global connectedness of commodity as a new shape in which to group peoples in the study of kinship, religion and other cultural phenomena. In revealing how sugar came to England as science, theology, morality and a bedfellow (or perhaps even a progenitor) of the Enlightenment and other significant social shifts, the author hopes to springboard similar scholarship in cultural studies. The text concludes that the massive success of sugar in imposing a sort of consumptive hegemony in places like England and the United States, while not as significantly restructuring cultural practices in places like France and China, presents fertile ground for future research. If it has a shortfalling, it is the absence of a more explicit centering of power-this is to say that in focusing on the mutual marginalization of production and consumption there is a lack of coherence when it comes to narrating a driving force behind it all. Nonetheless the author makes significant contributions to cultural studies and interdisciplinary scholarship as well as hinting at the potential for deploying commodity as a postnational and contra-national discourse.
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