Every home a distillery alcohol, gender, and technology in the colonial Chesapeake /
Bewaard in:
Hoofdauteur: | |
---|---|
Coauteur: | |
Formaat: | Elektronisch E-boek |
Taal: | Engels |
Gepubliceerd in: |
Baltimore :
Johns Hopkins University Press,
2009.
|
Reeks: | Early America.
|
Onderwerpen: | |
Online toegang: | An electronic book accessible through the World Wide Web; click to view |
Tags: |
Voeg label toe
Geen labels, Wees de eerste die dit record labelt!
|
Inhoudsopgave:
- "It was being too abstemious that brought this sickness upon me" : alcoholic beverage consumption in the early Chesapeake
- "They will be adjudged by their drinke, what kind of housewives they are" : gender, technology, and household cidering in England and the Chesapeake, 1690 to 1760
- "This drink cannot be kept during the summer" : large planters, science, and community networks in the early eighteenth century
- "Anne Howard-- will take in gentlemen" : white middling women and the tavernkeeping trade in colonial Virginia
- "Ladys here all go to market to supply their pantry" : alcohol for sale, 1760 to 1776
- "Every man his own distiller" : technology, the American Revolution, and the masculinization of alcohol production in the late eighteenth century
- "He is much addicted to strong drinke" : the problem of alcohol
- A few recipes.