A Short History of the American Stomach |
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You Are Here: Home > History Books > Holland History > Item 468
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A Short History of the American Stomach
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by Frederick Kaufman
Sales Rank: 511112

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List Price: $23.00
$14.50
At Amazon on 10-13-2008.

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Features
Cover Type: Hard Cover with 224 pages
Published by: Harcourt February 4, 2008
Written in: English
ISBN 10 Number: 015101194X
ISBN 13 Number: 978-0151011940
Book Dimensions:
8.1 x 5.2 x 1 inches
Weighs: 10.4 ounces
From Publishers Weekly
Kaufman, an English professor at New York's City University, pursues a hip, journalistic approach to America's all-consuming relationship to the gut, from Puritan rituals of fasting to the creation of the Food Network. Kaufman maintains that the feast-fast syndrome that torments America—obesity, anorexia, overeating, dieting, fads and cures, gastroporn, pollution and purity of food, and self-sufficiency—all originate from our understanding of virtue and vice, first established by the Puritans. Indeed, these first settlers held that the stomach's equilibrium reflected one's spiritual state, and the process of digestion maintained the body's intimate fine-tuning between good and evil. Days of fasting were declared as ways of seeking spiritual guidance, and purges and emetics used to expunge evil and corruption from the system, much as today's advocates of raw foods and unpasteurized milk press their enzyme cures. To demonstrate examples of the ethics of eating, Kaufman discusses dietary restrictions such as kosher foods and, conversely, the lifting of all restrictions by the primal culinary tastes nurtured in the Wild West. Kaufman traces dieting to Ben Franklin's obsession with the virtue of temperance and offers myriad examples of how certain diets (e.g., vegetarianism, single-substance eating) were intended to effect one's transformation from within. With a final paean to endangered favorites such as bananas and oysters, Kaufman digresses forgivingly in this occasionally incongruous though entertaining study. (Feb.) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Product Review
"There's no better literary difestif." (New York Daiy News )
"Vastly entertaining as it leads us through America's digetive history, this book serves up Kaufman's notion of a country whose development can be traced by the way its citizens eat, grow, digest, and think of food." (Library Journal )
"This rollicking survey of our national food manias from Cotton Mather ('Look after thy stomach') to Rachael Ray is amiably peripatetic." (New York Observer )
"Witty and polemical[Kaufman] makes some valuable points about how the stomach influences the ways Americans view themselves." (Los Angeles Times )
"Kaufman's witty historical analysis will be a treat for anyone interested in food. He even finds insightful things to say about obscenely dry historical figures like 17th-century minister Cotton Mather, whose diaries are ripe with passages of binge-and-purge Puritanism. By invoking the teachings of 'gastrosophists' such a Sylvester Graham (yes, as in the cracker), and linking them to our current food-crazed culture, he deftly illustrates how America always has, and probably always will, lead with its gut." (New York Magazine )
--This text refers to the
Paperback
edition.
Reader Reviews - and what a relief! This is one of those books you never knew you wanted until you had it in your hands. Kaufman's sense of history is direct, keen, and alive, informed by a sly, philosophical wit, and presented with a true sensualist's love of his subject. The result is snappy, readable, and laced with a profound, yet hilarious, understanding of Brillat-Savarin's often-misquoted, "Dites-moi ce que vous mangez et je vous dirai qui vous êtes" -- accurately translated by the immortal M.F.K. Fisher (who would have held this volume close to her heart) as, "Tell me what you eat, and I will tell you who you are." Kaufman shows us, with clarity and charm, how that aphorism works in both directions, always has, and always will.
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A Short History of the American Stomach
Available from Amazon
Price: $14.50
Updated on 10-13-2008.

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