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Food in the American Gilded Age

Veit, Helen Zoe(Edited by)
Part of the American Food in History series
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Food was incredibly diverse in post-Civil War America.

It was an era of gross income inequality, and differences in diet reflected the deep disparities between upper and lower classes, as well as the expansion of a flourishing middle class.

In this book, excerpts from a wide range of Gilded Age sources-from period cookbooks to advice manuals to dietary studies-reveal how jarringly eating and cooking differed between classes and regions at a time when technology and industrialization were transforming what and how people ate.

Most of all, they show how strongly the fabled glitz of wealthy Americans in the Gilded Age contrasted with the lives of most Americans.

Featuring a variety of sources as well as accessible essays putting those sources into context, this book provides a remarkable portrait of food in a singular era in American history, giving a glimpse into the kinds of meals eaten everywhere from high society banquets to the meanest tenements and sharecropping cabins.

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£26.95
Product Details
1609175174 / 9781609175177
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
01/05/2017
United States
English
325 pages
Copy: 15%; print: 15%
Reprint. Includes texts originally published 1870-1903 Description based on CIP data: resource not viewed.