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Revolution at the Table: The Transformation of the American Diet

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For most Americans in the 19th century it wasnt what you ate but how much you ate that mattered. Late in the century doctors wrote books like How To Be Plumb and the voluptuous woman was the ideal. The famed actress Lillian Russell considered by many the epitome of beauty weighed almost two hundred pounds. Today in contrast Americans seem obsessed with calories diets and slimness and with eating healthful amounts of vitamins minerals fats and proteins. What sparked this remarkable revolution in the way we eat. As historian Harvey Levenstein points out the great American food revolution really occurred between the years 1880 and 1930. Focusing on this pivotal half-century Levenstein provides a vivid account of the people and social forces that redirected the American diet spiced with colorful portraits of the reformers scientists businessmen faddists and hucksters who promoted or exploited the eating revolution. Here we meet the MIT chemist Ellen Richards and the "scientific" home economists who failed to change workers diets but then succeeded with the middle class...the wealthy faddist Horace Fletcher the Great Masticator advocate of a low-protein diet and "thorough mastication" (over 100 chews per mouthful)...the social workers who despaired over immigrants eating habits particularly their love of spicey one-pot dinners...the flamboyant Dr. John Harvey Kellogg and his brother William who invented corn flakes as a vegetarian health food...and Elmer McCollum who discovered vitamins A and D and who was later hired by General Mills tout the nutritional benefits of white bread. Levenstein serves up fascinating insights into the social economic and political forces that spurred the eating revolution--urbanization immigration technological and agricultural advances and the changing role of women in society. He examines how nutritional science developed in America; how Prohibitions ban on wine helped destroy French cuisine in America; how changes in womens work marriage and the family led to lighter time-saving meals; and how giant food corporations used massive advertising budgets to change the way Americans prepared foods. By 1930 the eating habits of Americans had undergone an incredible metamorphosis. For anyone who has ever wondered why we eat what we eat and why we sometimes change this wide-ranging colorful social history offers some illuminating and even surprising answers.

Product details

Publisher
My Store
Publication date
April 21, 1988
ISBN-10
0195043650
ISBN-13
9780195043655
Item Weight
21.6 oz
Dimensions
9.49 × 1.14 × 6.5 in
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