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The Empire of Tea:

The Remarkable History of the Plant That Took Over the World
Front Cover
27 Reviews
Overlook Press, Mar 1, 2004 - Cooking - 308 pages
From the fourth century B.C. in China, where tea was used as an aid in Buddhist meditation, to the Boston Tea Party in 1773, when its destruction became a rousing symbol of the American Revolution, to its present-day role as the single most consumed beverage on the planet, The Empire of Tea explores the effects of the humble Camelia plant—both tragic and liberating—in the history of civilization. Alan MacFarlane explains, among other things, how tea became the worldÂ's most prevalent addiction, its use as an instrument of imperial control, and how the cultivation of tea led to the invention of machines and technology during the industrial revolution.

The Empire of Tea also incorporates personal stories of the people whose lives have been affected by their contact with the global obsession with tea, including the elegantly detailed account of Iris MacFarlane about her life on a tea estate in the Indian province of Assam, the worldÂ's center of tea cultivation. A fascinatingly tour of the worldÂ's great tea cultures—Japan, China, India, France, the United Kingdom, and others—The Empire of Tea brings into sharp focus one of the forces that have shaped history.

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Review: The Empire of Tea

User Review  - Karen - Goodreads

i enjoyed the historical context of tea with public health improvements, industrialization in England,and global politics. But ended up reading the end fast just to get it over with. Read full review

Review: The Empire of Tea

User Review  - Amanda - Goodreads

The book concentrates on tea in India which disappointed me a little as I was hoping for of the history of tea in China and Japan as well. However, it was well written and quite informative. Read full review

All 27 reviews »

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Contents

Memoirs of a Memsahib
1
The Story of an Addiction
31
Froth of the Liquid Jade
41
Copyright

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About the author (2004)

Alan MacFarlane combines a historical and anthropological background that includes thirty years of experience in the Himalayas and research on British and Japanese history. He is professor of social anthropology at the University of Cambridge.

Iris MacFarlane lived in an Assamese tea garden for twenty years and has written on India and Assamese history.

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