ABSTRACT

This book maps changing patterns of drinking. Emphasis is laid on the connected histories of different regions and populations across the globe regarding consumption patterns, government policies, economics and representations of alcohol and drinking.

Its transnational perspective facilitates an understanding of the local and global factors that have had a bearing on alcohol consumption and legislation, especially on the emergence of particular styles of ‘drinking cultures’. The comparative approach helps to identify similarities, differences and crossovers between particular regions and pinpoint the parameters that shape alcohol consumption, policies, legal and illegal production, and popular perceptions.

With a wide geographic range, the book explores plural drinking cultures within any one region, their association with specific social groups, and their continuities and changes in the wake of wider global, colonial and postcolonial economic, political and social constraints and exchanges.

chapter 1|19 pages

Introduction: Alcohol flows across cultures

Drinking cultures in transnational and comparative perspective

chapter 2|24 pages

The same drink?

Wine and absinthe consumption and drinking cultures among French and Muslim groups in nineteenth-century Algeria

chapter 4|23 pages

Drinking dis-ease

Alcohol and colonialism in the international city of Tangier, 1912–1956

chapter 5|39 pages

Between promotions and prohibitions

The shifting symbolisms and spaces of beer in modern Turkey

chapter 6|16 pages

Good hope for the pilsner

Commerce, culture and the consumption of the pilsner beer in British Southern Africa, c. 1870–1914

chapter 7|20 pages

“A hotbed of sins” or “just like home”?

Drinking cultures in colonial Qingdao (1897–1914)

chapter 8|27 pages

Filched fungi?

Bioprospecting and the circulation of “Chinese yeast”, c. 1892–1933

chapter 9|18 pages

Gariahat Whisky

Bootlegged cosmopolitanism and the making of the nationalistic state, Calcutta c. 1923–1935

chapter 10|17 pages

“Lurvenbrow”

Bavarian beer culture and barstool diplomacy in the global market, 1945–1964