In 1600 the word ‘consumption’ was a term of medical pathology describing the ‘wasting, petrification of things’. By 1700 it was also a term of economic discourse: ‘In commodities, the value rises as its quantity is less and vent greater, which depends upon it being preferred in its consumption’. The article traces the emergence of this key category of economic analysis to debates over the economy in the 1620s and subsequent disputes over the excise tax, showing how ‘consumption’ was an early term in the developing lexicon of political economy. In so doing the article demonstrates the important role of ‘intoxicants’ – i.e. addictive and intoxicating commodities like alcohols and tobaccos – in shaping these early meanings and uses of ‘consum...
Overseas trade and European expansion in the sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth centuries turned...
A Farewell to Alms argued based on wages, rents and returns on capital that the English by 1800 were...
This article argues for an alternative response to the 'consumer society' hypothesis for eighteenth-...
This article traces the changing semantics of drunkard in English during the first half of the seven...
While consumption has moved to centre stage in accounts of Britain's industrialization, evidence on ...
211 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2001.This dissertation examines ho...
This paper explores the idea of intoxication by focusing on a key contradiction of capitalism. Namel...
This thesis explores the trade and consumption of tobacco in seventeenth-century England and Wales (...
[This post is part of The Recipe Project's annual Teaching Series. Here, Drs. James Brown and Angel...
This thesis explores the word ‘addict’ and the concepts it was applied to, from the invention of the...
This article focuses on the uses of opiates in early modern Scotland in an effort to trace the negle...
Alcohol consumption in 21st-century Britain is of significant interest to government, media and acad...
When the English word ‘addict' emerged in the sixteenth century, it did not mean the same as addicti...
The aim of the research was to explore how key addiction terminology was used in medical publication...
Exploring the idea of luxury in relation to a series of neighboring but distinct concepts including ...
Overseas trade and European expansion in the sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth centuries turned...
A Farewell to Alms argued based on wages, rents and returns on capital that the English by 1800 were...
This article argues for an alternative response to the 'consumer society' hypothesis for eighteenth-...
This article traces the changing semantics of drunkard in English during the first half of the seven...
While consumption has moved to centre stage in accounts of Britain's industrialization, evidence on ...
211 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2001.This dissertation examines ho...
This paper explores the idea of intoxication by focusing on a key contradiction of capitalism. Namel...
This thesis explores the trade and consumption of tobacco in seventeenth-century England and Wales (...
[This post is part of The Recipe Project's annual Teaching Series. Here, Drs. James Brown and Angel...
This thesis explores the word ‘addict’ and the concepts it was applied to, from the invention of the...
This article focuses on the uses of opiates in early modern Scotland in an effort to trace the negle...
Alcohol consumption in 21st-century Britain is of significant interest to government, media and acad...
When the English word ‘addict' emerged in the sixteenth century, it did not mean the same as addicti...
The aim of the research was to explore how key addiction terminology was used in medical publication...
Exploring the idea of luxury in relation to a series of neighboring but distinct concepts including ...
Overseas trade and European expansion in the sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth centuries turned...
A Farewell to Alms argued based on wages, rents and returns on capital that the English by 1800 were...
This article argues for an alternative response to the 'consumer society' hypothesis for eighteenth-...