Potato

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Product Details
Price
$14.95  $13.90
Publisher
Bloomsbury Academic
Publish Date
Pages
144
Dimensions
4.7 X 0.6 X 6.4 inches | 0.3 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781501344312
BISAC Categories:

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About the Author
Rebecca Earle is Professor in History at the University of Warwick, UK. She is the author of three books, including The Body of the Conquistador: Food, Race and the Colonial Experience in Spanish America, 1492-1700 (2012), which was Winner of the Conference on Latin America History 2013 Bolton-Johnson Prize, and The Return of the Native: Indians and Mythmaking in Spanish America, 1810-1930 (2008), which was Winner of the Conference on Latin American History's 2008 Bolton-Johnson Prize Honorable Mention. She has written about the history of food for The Conversation, BBC History Magazine, The Independent, and The Sunday Telegraph, among other publications.
Reviews

"Potato by resourceful Rebecca Earle gives us history, recipes, prayers of thanks, and family stories ... Each section educates, brings a smile, makes you hungry, and makes you think." - The Philadelphia Inquirer

"Rebecca Earle ... intellectualizes the history of potatoes to portray the tuber's entanglement with the emergence of modernity, the birth of the liberal state, and with the idea that the individual is the basic building unit of society. The story of potatoes unfolding over the centuries bears a close resemblance with human stories replete with ordinariness, grit, prejudice, migration, and changing fortune ... Earle relies on history books, cookbooks, pictures, paintings, and posters to interweave human stories with the ups and downs of potatoes ... Earle has written a fine book, much in the tradition of ekphrasis, which burrows and shovels art objects to cultivate a piece of writing." - New York Journal of Books

"Learn more about this staple tater through this engrossing report about its origin, development, and influence on our lives." - Manhattan Book Review

"From its Andean home, the potato went almost everywhere in the world and thought about the potato went almost everywhere in the culture. Rebecca Earle elegantly follows the potato's travels through political economy, statecraft, nutritional science, gastronomy, religion, and literature. This is a marvellous historical mash-up of a food which did much to make modernity." --Steven Shapin, Harvard University, and author of The Scientific Revolution (2nd ed., 2018) and A Social History of Truth (1994)

"Potato is a delight. Rebecca Earle writes vividly and with wonderful insight. Who could ever have thought that the entire world - cultures, ideologies, identity - could be decoded through the language of the humble spud? I'll never look at a potato the same way again." --Ruby Tandoh, author of Eat Up: Food, Appetite and Eating What You Want (2018)