Tag Archives: History of Sugar

Books: Literary Review Magazine – August 2023

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Literary Review – August 2023 Issue: How Sugar Became King; Oil, Resin, Vinegar & Paint – “Albrecht Dürer: Art and Autobiography” By David Ekserdjian; Shopping & Plucking – “How to Be a Renaissance Woman: The Untold History of Beauty and Female Creativity” By Jill Burke and more…

Oil, Resin, Vinegar & Paint

Albrecht Dürer: Art and Autobiography (Renaissance Lives): Ekserdjian, David:  9781789147643: Amazon.com: Books

Albrecht Dürer: Art and Autobiography By David Ekserdjian

Dürer’s Lost Masterpiece: Art and Society at the Dawn of a Global World By Ulinka Rublack

The German Renaissance artist Albrecht Dürer (1471–1528) was fortunate in his initials. The stylised ‘AD’ that he routinely inserted into his paintings and engravings, and even the preparatory drawings, seemed to imbue his productions with an almost divine stamp of approval. Most German painters of the era did not sign their work, but Dürer was eager to assert creative ownership of his productions, obtaining legal protection of his sole right to the trademark monogram.

Curse of Cane

The World of Sugar: How the Sweet Stuff Transformed Our Politics, Health,  and Environment over 2,000 Years: Bosma, Ulbe: 9780674279391: Amazon.com:  Books

The World of Sugar: How the Sweet Stuff Transformed Our Politics, Health, and Environment over 2,000 Years By Ulbe Bosma

There was a time when commodity histories were everywhere. They tended to focus on consumption and trade over very long distances. Ulbe Bosma’s The World of Sugar is much more than this sort of book. It is one of the most accomplished longue durée case studies in the history of capitalism that we have, concerned not just with trade and consumption but with production also. At every turn it subverts both critiques and celebrations of capitalism, and our understanding of much else besides. It is an extraordinary achievement.