๐”– Bobbio Scriptorium
โœฆ   LIBER   โœฆ

Cover of The trouble with tea. The politics of consumption in the eighteenth-century global economy

The trouble with tea. The politics of consumption in the eighteenth-century global economy

โœ Scribed by Merritt, Jane T.


Publisher
Johns Hopkins University Press
Year
2017
Tongue
English
Weight
668 KB
Category
Fiction
ISBN-13
9781421421537

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

โœฆ Synopsis


Americans imagined tea as central to their revolution. After years of colonial boycotts against the commodity, the Sons of Liberty kindled the fire of independence when they dumped tea in the Boston harbor in 1773. To reject tea as a consumer item and symbol of "taxation without representation" was to reject Great Britain as master of the American economy and government. But tea played a longer and far more complicated role in American economic history than the events at Boston suggest. Jane T. Merritt explores tea as a central component of eighteenth-century global trade and probes its connections to the politics of consumption. Arguing that tea caused trouble over the course of the eighteenth century in a number of different ways, Merritt traces the multifaceted impact of that luxury item on British imperial policy, colonial politics, and the financial structure of merchant companies. Merritt challenges the assumption among economic historians that consumer demand drove merchants to provide an ever-increasing supply of goods, thus sparking a consumer revolution in the early eighteenth century. The book reveals a surprising truth: that concerns about the British political economy, coupled with the corporate machinations of the East India Company, brought an abundance of tea to Britain, causing the company to target North America as a potential market for surplus tea. American consumers only slowly habituated themselves to the beverage, aided by clever marketing and the availability of Caribbean sugar.


๐Ÿ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES


The lady tasting tea: How statistics rev
โœ Daniel J. Denis ๐Ÿ“‚ Article ๐Ÿ“… 2003 ๐Ÿ› John Wiley and Sons ๐ŸŒ English โš– 142 KB

Once upon a time, philosophical naturalism was a robust pan-discipline enterprise. Its advocates promoted the method of empirical science in an all-out battle for the new twentieth century against entrenched theological and conservative forces. In America, the battle started late but proved to be de

Jonathan Andrews and Andrew Scull. Custo
โœ Peter Bartlett ๐Ÿ“‚ Article ๐Ÿ“… 2004 ๐Ÿ› John Wiley and Sons ๐ŸŒ English โš– 139 KB

and key studies by Danto and Schacht, scholarship on Nietzsche in the past twenty-five years has seldom waned. One would imagine this is largely the result of Nietzsche's relationship to some of the most important philosophical movements in the twentieth century: existentialism, postmodern thought,