Exploring a wide range of written discourse on early modern brewing and the material features and practices contributing to those conversations, this book demonstrates the considerable role that discussions of drink played in defining the boundaries of human life and action in England and beyond.
The social meaning of drink was an ever-contested cultural site in the early modern Atlantic. From complaints about watered-down ale to suspicions around ingredients and imported foreign wines to the moral blame assigned to alehouses and inns for drunkenness and raucous behavior, early modern writers saw the fermentation process as just one of many sites in which drink signified change. Discussing beer and brewing meant defining the limits of human rationality, markers of individual and collective identity, and the nature of responsibility. This book’s interdisciplinary approach draws upon texts as varied as brewing manuals, manuscript receipt books, plays, broadside ballads, and joke books to show the two-way conversation between these complex cultural works and the materiality of fermented drink as a cultural artifact.
This book will be useful for graduate students and scholars of early modern English literature and early American literature, food studies, food history, and material culture.
Exploring a wide range of written discourse on early modern brewing and the material features and practices contributing to those conversations, this book demonstrates the considerable role that discussions of drink played in defining the boundaries of human life and action in England and beyond.
Introduction: That Art and Mystery: Early Modern Brewing Discourse
1.
Performing the Permeable Self: Drink and Agency on the Early Modern English
Stage
2. Barm, Gender, and Social Distinction in Early Modern England
3. A
Wholesomer Brew: Imitation, Artifice, and Deceit in Early Modern Brewing
Texts
4. Brewing Discourse and Moral Agency in Dissenting Religious Thought
5. God wotte what liquor: Brewing History, Agriculture, and Nostalgia in
Early Modern England. Conclusion: Drinking Tobacco: Negotiating the
Boundaries of Drink in the Early Modern Atlantic World
Donovan E. Tann is Professor of English at the University of Dubuque, USA, where he has taught early modern literature and general education courses since 2021. His work has appeared in SEL: Studies in English Literature, Bunyan Studies, and 16501850: Ideas, Aesthetics, and Inquiries in the Early Modern Era.