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E-grāmata: Coffee Culture: Local Experiences, Global Connections

(Indiana University, USA)
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Coffee Culture: Local experiences, Global Connections explores coffee as (1) a major commodity that shapes the lives of millions of people; (2) a product with a dramatic history; (3) a beverage with multiple meanings and uses (energizer, comfort food, addiction, flavouring, and confection); (4) an inspiration for humor and cultural critique; (5) a crop that can help protect biodiversity yet also threaten the environment; (6) a health risk and a health food; and (7) a focus of alternative trade efforts. This book presents coffee as a commodity that ties the world together, from the coffee producers and pickers who tend the plantations in tropical nations, to the middlemen and processors, to the consumers who drink coffee without ever having to think about how the drink reached their hands.

Recenzijas

Although concern about the qualities of the more than 6 billion cups of coffee imbibed every year continues to rise among many, until recently questions of human rights, sustainability, and justice were seriously considered by only a handful of engaged scholars, citizens, and farmers. In this ambitious biography of the bean, Catherine Tucker reminds us that, "We are linked physically, symbolically, and economically through the production, distribution, and consumption of coffee." Tuckers research compares the theoretical insights gained from anthropology, sociology, and food studies to explain how coffee production, trade, and profits helped to build nations, influence local environments, and shape patterns of global inequality. She critically analyzes recent industry trends and engages efforts to create an alternative coffee economy, including the rise of Starbucks and fair trade. Cross-cultural comparisons are grounded in the everyday experiences of coffee drinking, and elucidated through Tuckers accessible prose.

Christopher M. Bacon, Associate Professor of Environmental Studies Santa Clara University

Catherine Tucker should be congratulated for her excellent and vivid book on coffee consumption. It was carefully written after field research on various farms, notably in Honduras (p. 139). Each chapter concludes with some highlights and summary questions. We understand that coffee is socially constructed, just like any kind of food, and perhaps more than any other commodity. Thus, five years after its first edition, Catherine Tuckers Coffee Culture, 2nd ed. is more relevant than ever. Yves Laberge, Ph.D, Department of Visual Arts, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Canada, Electronic Green Journal, Issue 41, Spring 2018,

List of Illustrations
xi
Series Foreword xii
Preface xiv
Acknowledgments xvi
Acronyms and Abbreviations xviii
PART I COFFEE CULTURE, SOCIAL LIFE, AND GLOBAL HISTORY
1(50)
1 Culture, Caffeine, and Coffee Shops
3(8)
2 Theories of Food and Social Meanings of Coffee
11(7)
3 Coffee Culture, History, and Media in Coca-Cola Land
18(8)
4 Tracing Coffee Connections
26(10)
5 Coffee and the Rise of the World System
36(9)
6 Coffee, the Industrial Revolution, and Body Discipline
45(6)
PART II ACCOLADES AND ANTIPATHIES: COFFEE CONTROVERSIES THROUGH TIME
51(30)
7 Coffee Controversies and Threats to Social Order
53(6)
8 National Identities and Cultural Relevance
59(8)
9 Coffee Waste, Consumer Choices, and Activism on College Campuses
67(8)
10 Is Coffee Good or Bad for You?: Debates over Physical and Mental Health Effects
75(6)
PART III COFFEE PRODUCTION AND PROCESSING
81(30)
11 Planting and Caring for Coffee
83(5)
12 Harvesting, Processing, and Inequality
88(8)
13 Environmental Sustainability of Coffee Production
96(8)
14 Environmental Conundrums of Coffee Processing
104(7)
PART IV MARKETS AND THE MODERN WORLD SYSTEM
111(38)
15 Market Volatility and Social Calamity
113(6)
16 Efforts to Mitigate the Coffee Cycle and the Distribution of Power
119(8)
17 A Brief History of Fair Trade
127(10)
18 Conundrums of Fair Trade Coffee: Building Equity or Reinventing Subjugation?
137(7)
19 Riding the Next Wave of Coffee: Possibilities for Transformation
144(5)
Appendix: A Coffee Culture Timeline 149(3)
References 152(13)
Index 165
Catherine M. Tucker is a sociocultural and ecological anthropologist at the University of Florida.