Sugar: A Bittersweet HistoryAbrams, 2011 M09 27 - 545 páginas This dramatic history of an ingredient that changed the world “offers up a number of fascinating stories” (The New York Times Book Review). Sugar explores the history behind the sweetness, revealing, among other stories, how powerful American interests deposed Queen Lili’uokalani of Hawaii; how Hitler tried to ensure a steady supply of beet sugar when enemies threatened to cut off Germany’s supply of overseas cane sugar; and how South Africa established a domestic ethanol industry in the wake of anti-apartheid sugar embargos. The book follows the role of sugar in world events and in individual lives up to the present day, showing how it made eating on the run socially acceptable and played an integral role in today’s fast food culture and obesity epidemic. Impressively researched and commandingly written, Sugar will forever change perceptions of this tempting treat. “A highly readable and comprehensive study of a remarkable product.” —The Independent “Epic in ambition and briskly written.” —The Wall Street Journal “Readers will never again be able to casually sweeten tea or eat sweets without considering the long and fascinating history of sugar.” —Booklist |
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... percent of an ounce of gold to a mere 8.7 percent. Classic cookbooks illustrate how, by the late sixteenth century, ambitious commercial families were demanding recipes for sugary cakes and decorations in the shape of fruits, and even ...
... percent of an ounce of gold to a mere 8.7 percent. Classic cookbooks illustrate how, by the late sixteenth century, ambitious commercial families were demanding recipes for sugary cakes and decorations in the shape of fruits, and even ...
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... percent of Hispaniola's remaining Tainos . By mid - century , they were extinct . In other colonies , up to 90 percent of the native population would disappear well before the seventeenth century . By 1611 , for example , only seventy ...
... percent of Hispaniola's remaining Tainos . By mid - century , they were extinct . In other colonies , up to 90 percent of the native population would disappear well before the seventeenth century . By 1611 , for example , only seventy ...
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... percent of the crops that farmers struggle to produce in the parched and eroded soil . As Eric Williams lamented , " King Sugar had begun his depredations . " 55 Chapter 2 The Proletarianization of Sugar THE NOBLE DELICACY Sugar.
... percent of the crops that farmers struggle to produce in the parched and eroded soil . As Eric Williams lamented , " King Sugar had begun his depredations . " 55 Chapter 2 The Proletarianization of Sugar THE NOBLE DELICACY Sugar.
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... percent of the total ingredients - and was gaining fans . Its European origins were likely seventeenth - century Italy and later France , from where it crossed over to England by 1671 , when Charles II enjoyed ice cream on the Feast of ...
... percent of the total ingredients - and was gaining fans . Its European origins were likely seventeenth - century Italy and later France , from where it crossed over to England by 1671 , when Charles II enjoyed ice cream on the Feast of ...
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... percent before the age of five. Survivors often entered factories at five or six years old, and some employers sought them out. “The fingers of children at an early age are very supple, and they are more easily led into habits of ...
... percent before the age of five. Survivors often entered factories at five or six years old, and some employers sought them out. “The fingers of children at an early age are very supple, and they are more easily led into habits of ...
Contenido
The World the Whites Made | |
Sugar Stirs the Universe | |
Racism Resistance Rebellion and Revolution | |
Abolishing the Slave Trade | |
Slavery and Apprenticeship | |
Sugar for North America | |
The Sugar Diasporas | |
Meet and Eat Me in St Louis | |
Sugars Legacies and Prospects | |
Notes | |
Select Bibliography | |
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abolition abolitionist absentee African American Antigua Barbados became Big Sugar Black Codes candy cane cutters cane fields Casas Chinese chocolate Christian coffee consumed coolies Creole crop Cuba Cuban sugar Dessalles domestics Dominican Dominican Republic drink economic emancipation England English estates ethanol European factories Fanjul forced freedmen French gangs Goveia Haiti Haitian Haitian Revolution historian House ice cream important indentured indentureship Indian sugar Jamaica John Kanakas killed labor land later Leeward Islands lives London Louisiana Maroons Martinique masters million mills Mintz molasses mulatto Negroes numbers overseers percent Phibbah Pinney planters political produced provision grounds punished Quoted in ibid racial Rebels refined Revolution runaways sexual ships slave trade slave women social sold Spanish sugar beet sugar colonies sugar industry sugar plantations sugar production sugar slaves sugar world sugarcane sweet sweetened Taino Thistlewood wages West Indian West Indies whip Wilberforce William