Woods, Rebecca J. H. (Author)
In the mid-nineteenth century, animal flesh was subject to a range of treatments in an effort to preserve meat grown on the fringes of the British Empire (in Australia and New Zealand, South and North America) for consumption in urban centers in Britain. Focusing on the publications of the British Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Commerce and Manufacture, and allied sources such as the Lancet, this article demonstrates that the more a preservative technique transformed animal flesh, the more likely consumers—often presumed to hail from the poor and working classes—were to resist it. This resulted in frustration among elite “men of science and industry,” who held that tinned, canned, dried, or chemically treated meats were a “great boon” to precisely these classes. By refusing to consume industrial charqui, which was salted and dried, or by purchasing imported tinned Australian beef or mutton only unwillingly, the lower classes frustrated the ambitions of would-be tastemakers in the Society of Arts, who interpreted consumer resistance in their articles and published reports as the lower orders’ refusal to act in their own best interest. Importantly, it was the very changeability of meat—its figurative malleability as well as its material inconstancy—that enabled industrial transformations, consumer resistance, and its cultural symbolisms, making it a particularly rich object of study for historians of science.
...More
Article
Ardeleanu, Constantin;
(2012)
A British Meat Cannery in Moldavia (1844--52)
(/p/isis/citation/CBB001320668/)
Article
Raf De Bont;
(2020)
Eating Game: Proteins, International Conservation and the Rebranding of African Wildlife, 1955–1965
(/p/isis/citation/CBB180830596/)
Book
Mourad Djebabla-Brun;
(2012)
Combattre avec les vivres
(/p/isis/citation/CBB689436781/)
Article
Lieffers, Caroline;
(2012)
“The Present Time is Eminently Scientific”: The Science of Cookery in Nineteenth-Century Britain
(/p/isis/citation/CBB001320007/)
Article
Bullock, April;
(2012)
The Cosmopolitan Cookbook: Class, Taste, and Foreign Foods in Victorian Cookery Books
(/p/isis/citation/CBB001320905/)
Book
Wilson J. Warren;
(2018)
Meat Makes People Powerful: A Global History of the Modern Era
(/p/isis/citation/CBB191901096/)
Article
Corinna Treitel;
(2020)
Nutritional Modernity: The German Case
(/p/isis/citation/CBB961301071/)
Article
Pierre van der Eng;
(2000)
Food for Growth: Trends in Indonesia's Food Supply, 1880-1995
(/p/isis/citation/CBB334572590/)
Book
Gergely Baics;
(2016)
Feeding Gotham: The Political Economy and Geography of Food in New York, 1790–1860
(/p/isis/citation/CBB350981838/)
Book
Oddy, Derek J;
Drouard, Alain;
(2013)
The Food Industries of Europe in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries
(/p/isis/citation/CBB001422263/)
Article
Nelson, Bryn;
(2009)
The Lingering Heat over Pasteurized Milk
(/p/isis/citation/CBB001021066/)
Chapter
Thoms, Ulrike;
(2014)
The Introduction of Frozen Foods in West Germany and Its Integration into the Daily Diet
(/p/isis/citation/CBB001500413/)
Article
Bradford Bouley;
(2020)
Digesting Faith: Eating God, Man, and Meat in Seventeenth-Century Rome
(/p/isis/citation/CBB553359250/)
Book
Josh Berson;
(2019)
The Meat Question: Animals, Humans, and the Deep History of Food
(/p/isis/citation/CBB923625897/)
Book
Emily E. LB. Twarog;
(2017)
Politics of the Pantry: Housewives, Food, and Consumer Protest in Twentieth-Century America
(/p/isis/citation/CBB799784631/)
Article
K. Allen;
(2019)
“The Official Response is Never Enough”
(/p/isis/citation/CBB566761883/)
Article
Ted McCormick;
(2020)
Food, Population, and Empire in the Hartlib Circle, 1639–1660
(/p/isis/citation/CBB639961402/)
Book
Christiane Berth;
(2021)
Food and Revolution: Fighting Hunger in Nicaragua, 1960-1993
(/p/isis/citation/CBB476947622/)
Book
Brian Fagan;
(2017)
Fishing: How the Sea Fed Civilization
(/p/isis/citation/CBB457633728/)
Book
Jia-Chen Fu;
(2019)
The Other Milk: Reinventing Soy in Republican China
(/p/isis/citation/CBB123708142/)
Be the first to comment!