A green and divine drink: The reception of Asian green tea in Swedish consumer culture and media discourses concerning health. By Louise Nilsson. This article deals with the reception of tea in Sweden from the middle of the 18th century to 2005. The aim is to examine the reception of tea as an exotic and luxurious product by the Swedish aristocracy in the 18th century, as well as to investigate how tea later on became a product of everyday life in Swedish consumer culture. Since aristocrats drank tea as a diversion in between the meals, the drink became a symbol of social status. In the 19th century, the habit of drinking tea became usual within the middle-class bourgeoisie. It was not until the 20th century that tea becam...
As beverage intake can play an important part of choosing a healthy diet, it is important to increas...
When thinking of the play activities of a young girl, tea parties might come to mind first while the...
Purpose: This paper aims to challenge the assumption that brands of everyday products have only used...
A green and divine drink: The reception of Asian green tea in Swedish consumer culture and media dis...
Tea is known worldwide for its unique taste and health benefits to the human body. Recent studies on...
This is a historical corpus study of the words tea, coffee, and chocolate, examining the occurrence ...
This article discusses the material history of coffee and tea by drawing on mid-eighteenth-century s...
The thesis investigates a part of the cultural meeting between Sweden and Japan, 1878-1939, namely c...
This research contributes to a better understanding of the criteria used for the selection of plants...
From its inception in 1869, margarine was considered a working-class food, associated with poverty a...
Although introduced in England during the 1650s, tea remained on the periphery of society until the ...
Since the liberalisation of the market in the 1990s, the amount of green tea imported from China to ...
The purpose of this doctorate thesis is to investigate the historical discursive construction of swe...
This article illuminate about tea, which spread in the world wildly and take an important role in cu...
Tea, an aromatic beverage made from the leaves of the tea plant, has been widely accepted as a non-e...
As beverage intake can play an important part of choosing a healthy diet, it is important to increas...
When thinking of the play activities of a young girl, tea parties might come to mind first while the...
Purpose: This paper aims to challenge the assumption that brands of everyday products have only used...
A green and divine drink: The reception of Asian green tea in Swedish consumer culture and media dis...
Tea is known worldwide for its unique taste and health benefits to the human body. Recent studies on...
This is a historical corpus study of the words tea, coffee, and chocolate, examining the occurrence ...
This article discusses the material history of coffee and tea by drawing on mid-eighteenth-century s...
The thesis investigates a part of the cultural meeting between Sweden and Japan, 1878-1939, namely c...
This research contributes to a better understanding of the criteria used for the selection of plants...
From its inception in 1869, margarine was considered a working-class food, associated with poverty a...
Although introduced in England during the 1650s, tea remained on the periphery of society until the ...
Since the liberalisation of the market in the 1990s, the amount of green tea imported from China to ...
The purpose of this doctorate thesis is to investigate the historical discursive construction of swe...
This article illuminate about tea, which spread in the world wildly and take an important role in cu...
Tea, an aromatic beverage made from the leaves of the tea plant, has been widely accepted as a non-e...
As beverage intake can play an important part of choosing a healthy diet, it is important to increas...
When thinking of the play activities of a young girl, tea parties might come to mind first while the...
Purpose: This paper aims to challenge the assumption that brands of everyday products have only used...