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E-raamat: Transatlantic Trade and Global Cultural Transfers Since 1492: More than Commodities

Edited by (University of Vienna, Austria), Edited by (City University of New York, USA)
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Access to new plants and consumer goods such as sugar, tobacco and chocolate from the beginning of the sixteenth century onwards would massively change the way people lived, especially in how and what they consumed. While global markets were consequently formed and provided access to these new commodities that increasingly became important in the ‘Old World’, especially with regard to the establishment early modern consumer societies. This book brings together specialists from a range of historical fields to analyse the establishment of these commodity chains from the Americas to Europe as well as their cultural implications.

Notes on contributors vii
Introduction: commodity trade, globalization, and the making of the Atlantic World 1(12)
Frank Jacob
Martina Kaller
SECTION I Changing food habits
13(58)
1 Chasing chocolate: transfers, transformations, and continuities in the history of cacao
15(15)
John S. Henderson
Kathryn M. Hudson
2 Flavors and colors: the chili pepper in Europe
30(24)
Esther Katz
3 The Jazz Age, Neapolitans, and primitivism: futurist cuisine at the Exposition coloniale Internationale (1931)
54(17)
Mariana Aguirre
SECTION II New consumer societies
71(56)
4 Tobacco: a transatlantic commodity and its cultural impact in the early modern world
73(33)
Frank Jacob
5 Coca leaf transfers to Europe: effects on the consumption of coca in North-western Argentina
106(21)
Ricardo Abduca
SECTION III Knowledge and representation
127(81)
6 Peyote and ololiuhqui in the medical texts of New Spain and their circulation in Spain during the 16th and 17th centuries
129(21)
Angelica Morales-Sarabia
7 The pride of Lippitzbach: multiple spaces of knowledge and meanings of the Amazon water lily, from the Amazon Basin to Carinthia (Austria)
150(22)
Marianne Klemun
8 When the tomato was purely ornamental: considering New World foods in 17th-century Berlin
172(17)
Molly Taylor-Poleskey
9 Unlocking platinum: early European struggles with a colonial metal
189(19)
Noah Benninga
Index 208
Martina Kaller is Professor of Global History in the Department of History at the University of Vienna.

Frank Jacob is Professor for Global History at Nord University.