ABSTRACT

Caffeine is the world's most popular drug! Almost all of us start our day with a jolt of caffeine from coffee, tea or cola. And many of us crave chocolate when we're stressed or depressed. Without it we're lethargic, head-achy and miserable. Why? Why do we crave caffeine? How much do we really know about our number one drug of choice? Here is the first natural, cultural, and artistic history of our favorite mood enhancer--how it was discovered, its early uses, and the unexpected parts it has played in medicine, religion, painting, poetry, learning, and love. Weinberg and Bealer tell an intriguing story of a remarkable substance that has figured prominently in the exchanges of trade and intelligence among nations and whose most common sources, coffee, tea, and chocolate, have been both promoted as productive of health and creativity and banned as corrupters of the body and mind or subverters of social order. Some Highlights From the World of Caffeine Balzac's addiction to caffeine drove him to eat coffee, as some schizophrenic patients are observed to do today, and may have killed him Mary Tuke breaks the male monopoly on tea in England in 1725 The ways caffeine functions as a smart pill Goethe's responsibility for the discovery of caffeine Did a mini Ice Age help bring coffee, tea and chocolate to popularity in Europe? What is the mystery of coffee's origin? As good as gold: the stories of how caffeine, in its various forms, was used as cash in China, Africa, Central America and Egypt What does the civet cat have to do with the most costly coffee on earth today? The World of Caffeine is a captivating tale of art and society -- from India to Balzac to cybercafes -- and the ultimate caffeine resource.

part 1|29 pages

Caffeine In History

chapter 1|14 pages

Coffee

Arabian Origins

chapter 2|8 pages

Tea

Asian Origins

chapter 3|6 pages

Cacao

American Origins

part 2|47 pages

Europe Wakes Up To Caffeine

chapter 4|5 pages

Monks And Men-At-Arms

Europe's First Caffeine Connections

chapter 5|14 pages

The Caffeine Trade Supplants The Spice Trade

Tea and Coffee Come to the West

chapter 6|7 pages

The Late Adopters

Germany, Russia, and Sweden Join In

chapter 7|18 pages

Judgements of History

Medical Men Debate Caffeine

chapter 8|2 pages

Postscript

Why Did Caffeine Come When It Came?

part 3|54 pages

The Culture Of Caffeine

chapter 9|9 pages

Islands Of Caffeine (1)

Japan: The Tradition of Tea, the Novelty of Coffee

chapter 10|22 pages

Island Of Caffeine (2)

England: Caffeine and Empire

chapter 11|10 pages

The Endless Simmes

America and the Twentieth Century Do Caffeine

part 4|34 pages

The Natural History Of Caffeine

chapter 13|13 pages

Caffeine In The Laboratory

chapter 14|20 pages

Caffeine And The Plant Kingdom

“My Vegetable Love…”

part 5|29 pages

Caffeine And Health

chapter 15|13 pages

Caffeine And The Body

Health Effects, Reproductive Issues, and Fitness

chapter 16|7 pages

Thinking Over Caffeine

Cognition, Learning, and Emotional Well-Being

chapter |3 pages

Epilogue

A Toast to the Future