While there is significant public interest in the culture and history of food, popular and scholarly studies often overlook that food is technological. This article argues that public histories foregrounding food technology offer historians of technology opportunities to engage the public in topics that are both intimately familiar to all and yet riddled with misconceptions about the past, especially on pressing moral concerns relating to public health and the environment. Looking at past innovations in food requires unearthing tacit skills and invisible work routinely done by people whose stories, because of their gender, class, race, or nationality, were often erased from conventional histories of technology. Works that unmask food's hidden complexity demonstrate how even mundane, everyday objects are products of contested innovation.
...MoreArticle Barkha Kagliwal (2023) A Historian of Technology Watches "The King, His Kitchen, and Other Stories". Technology and Culture (pp. 919-929).
Article Ximo Guillem-Llobat (2023) Technology and Subaltern Knowledge at the Catalan Olive Oil Museum. Technology and Culture (pp. 909-917).
Article
Barkha Kagliwal;
(2023)
A Historian of Technology Watches "The King, His Kitchen, and Other Stories"
(/isis/citation/CBB701542926/)
Article
Alexandra Rutherford;
(2021)
Going Public: Mobilizing, Materializing, and Contesting Social Science History
(/isis/citation/CBB378590302/)
Article
Atkins, Peter J.;
(2011)
The Material Histories of Food Quality and Composition
(/isis/citation/CBB001210131/)
Article
Sabban, Françoise;
(2012)
Histoire de l'alimentation chinoise: bilan bibliographique (1911--2011)
(/isis/citation/CBB001320879/)
Article
Shapin, Steven;
(2014)
“You are what you eat”: Historical Changes in Ideas about Food and Identity
(/isis/citation/CBB001202088/)
Article
Quellier, Florent;
(2012)
L'aprés Jean-Louis Flandrin, une décennie d'histoire de l'alimentation en France (XVe-XIXe siécles)
(/isis/citation/CBB001320878/)
Book
Benjamin R. Cohen;
(2019)
Pure Adulteration: Cheating on Nature in the Age of Manufactured Food
(/isis/citation/CBB174903984/)
Book
Marion Nestle;
(2022)
Slow Cooked: An Unexpected Life in Food Politics
(/isis/citation/CBB913484834/)
Chapter
Jas, Nathalie;
(2013)
Adapting to “Reality”: The Emergence of an International Expertise on Food Additives and Contaminants in the 1950s and early 1960s
(/isis/citation/CBB001420171/)
Article
Carolyn Ann Cobbold;
(2018)
The Rise of Alternative Bread Leavening Technologies in the Nineteenth Century
(/isis/citation/CBB931973305/)
Book
Levenstein, Harvey;
(2012)
Fear of Food: A History of Why We Worry about What We Eat
(/isis/citation/CBB001210041/)
Book
Valenze, Deborah;
(2012)
Milk: A Local and Global History
(/isis/citation/CBB001210091/)
Article
Trindade, Cláudia Moraes;
(2011)
Doenças, alimentação e resistência na penitenciária da Bahia, 1861--1865
(/isis/citation/CBB001420550/)
Article
Ian Gazeley;
Sara Horrell;
(2013)
Nutrition in the English agricultural labourer's household over the course of the long nineteenth century
(/isis/citation/CBB913099101/)
Article
Charlotte Biltekoff;
Julie Guthman;
(2023)
Conscious, Complacent, Fearful: Agri-Food Tech’s Market-Making Public Imaginaries
(/isis/citation/CBB273771144/)
Article
Ximo Guillem-Llobat;
(2023)
Technology and Subaltern Knowledge at the Catalan Olive Oil Museum
(/isis/citation/CBB139095210/)
Article
Alan J. Rocke;
(2022)
Reflections on the Last and the Next Hundred Years
(/isis/citation/CBB294366367/)
Article
William H. Brock;
(2022)
The Long and Short of It: The Future Writing of History of Chemistry
(/isis/citation/CBB683831416/)
Article
Stephen J. Weininger;
(2022)
“The Poor Sister:” Coming to Grips with Recent and Contemporary Chemistry
(/isis/citation/CBB175973451/)
Article
Peter J. T. Morris;
Jeffrey I. Seeman;
(2022)
The Importance of Plurality and Mutual Respect in the Practice of the History of Chemistry
(/isis/citation/CBB375881495/)
Be the first to comment!