Description

Book Synopsis
Sara Pennell is Senior Lecturer in History at the University of Greenwich, UK. She is the co-editor, along with Michelle DiMeo, of Reading and Writing Recipe Books, 1550-1800 (2013).

Trade Review
One of [Sara Pennell’s] great strengths is her painstaking attempt to reconstruct ‘everyday’ plebeian and middling kitchens despite scant evidence. She accesses every type of source imaginable, including published accounts, diaries, letters, probate documents, court cases, deeds, ephemeral advertising, architectural and cookery books, illustrations, and literary sources … Pennell’s scholarship is not only impressive; her writing is accessible, elegant, and witty. * Journal of Design History *
A deeply impressive, immersive and multifaceted account. The study links production, consumption, technology, gender and social structure, the history of science, religion and the magical in creative, unexpected and suggestive ways. The author can justly claim to have definitively put the overlooked kitchen on the scholarly map. It is the ultimate historical sociology of the early modern kitchen. * Amanda Vickery, Queen Mary, University of London, UK *
This in-depth history of the early modern English kitchen is long overdue. Historian Pennell (Univ. of Greenwich, UK) analyzes past histories of the kitchen and their weaknesses, then provides a definitive yet nuanced, multifaceted, technical/social/religious/material/spatial/gender history of the kitchen up to 1850. … Pennell establishes the absolute importance of the kitchen to any household, whether elite or plebeian. The final chapter, "The Kitchen Displayed," examines the kitchen in historic houses today, suggesting ways to rethink those spaces and interconnect various disciplines that touch on the role of the kitchen--"the sensory realm of the pre-modern kitchen should not just be left to baking smells."… A welcome addition for public historians and early modern English historians, as well as those merely interested in kitchens. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All levels/libraries. * CHOICE *

Table of Contents
List of figures Acknowledgements Note on the text Abbreviations 1. Where’s the Kitchen? 2. Dream Kitchens? Imagining the Pre-Modern Kitchen 3. Locating the ‘Kitchen’ 4. The ‘Power House’: Technologies in the Kitchen 5. ‘Kitchen Stuff’: Useful Things in the Kitchen 6. Peopling the Kitchen 7. Kitchen Moralities 8. The Kitchen Displayed Notes Bibliography Index

The Birth of the English Kitchen 16001850

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    A Paperback by Sara Pennell

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      Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing (UK)
      Publication Date: 1/28/2017 12:12:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781350056183, 978-1350056183
      ISBN10: 1350056189

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Sara Pennell is Senior Lecturer in History at the University of Greenwich, UK. She is the co-editor, along with Michelle DiMeo, of Reading and Writing Recipe Books, 1550-1800 (2013).

      Trade Review
      One of [Sara Pennell’s] great strengths is her painstaking attempt to reconstruct ‘everyday’ plebeian and middling kitchens despite scant evidence. She accesses every type of source imaginable, including published accounts, diaries, letters, probate documents, court cases, deeds, ephemeral advertising, architectural and cookery books, illustrations, and literary sources … Pennell’s scholarship is not only impressive; her writing is accessible, elegant, and witty. * Journal of Design History *
      A deeply impressive, immersive and multifaceted account. The study links production, consumption, technology, gender and social structure, the history of science, religion and the magical in creative, unexpected and suggestive ways. The author can justly claim to have definitively put the overlooked kitchen on the scholarly map. It is the ultimate historical sociology of the early modern kitchen. * Amanda Vickery, Queen Mary, University of London, UK *
      This in-depth history of the early modern English kitchen is long overdue. Historian Pennell (Univ. of Greenwich, UK) analyzes past histories of the kitchen and their weaknesses, then provides a definitive yet nuanced, multifaceted, technical/social/religious/material/spatial/gender history of the kitchen up to 1850. … Pennell establishes the absolute importance of the kitchen to any household, whether elite or plebeian. The final chapter, "The Kitchen Displayed," examines the kitchen in historic houses today, suggesting ways to rethink those spaces and interconnect various disciplines that touch on the role of the kitchen--"the sensory realm of the pre-modern kitchen should not just be left to baking smells."… A welcome addition for public historians and early modern English historians, as well as those merely interested in kitchens. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All levels/libraries. * CHOICE *

      Table of Contents
      List of figures Acknowledgements Note on the text Abbreviations 1. Where’s the Kitchen? 2. Dream Kitchens? Imagining the Pre-Modern Kitchen 3. Locating the ‘Kitchen’ 4. The ‘Power House’: Technologies in the Kitchen 5. ‘Kitchen Stuff’: Useful Things in the Kitchen 6. Peopling the Kitchen 7. Kitchen Moralities 8. The Kitchen Displayed Notes Bibliography Index

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