ABSTRACT

This volume brings together for the first time a collection of essays, based on original research, which focus on the history of nutrition science in Britain. Each chapter considers a different episode in the development and application of nutritional knowledge during the twentieth century. The topics covered include: the chewing cult of Horace Fletcher, dietetic education, the popularization of milk, the Dunn Nutritional Laboratory, and wartime involvement in policy making.
The selection of essays in Nutrition in Britain provide valuable new insights into the social processes involved in the production and application of scientific knowledge of nutrition. This book will be fascinating reading to historians of science or medicine, as well as to medical sociologists, nutritionists, home economists, health educators, food activists and anyone with a professional or general interest in food and nutrition.

chapter |5 pages

Introduction Nutrition in Britain

Science, Scientists and Politics in the Twentieth Century

chapter 1|23 pages

Fletcherism

The Chew-Chew Fad of the Edwardian Era

chapter 4|24 pages

King's College of Household and Social Science

And the Origins of Dietetics Education

chapter 5|24 pages

Relief and Research

The Nutrition Work of the National Birthday Trust Fund, 1935–9

chapter 10|24 pages

Does Early Nutrition Affect Later Health?

Views from the 1930s and 1980s

chapter 11|23 pages

Going Public

Food Campaigns During the 1980s and Early 1990s