The Gastromythology of English Tea Culture: On the UKTC's Advertisements and Making Tea a "Fact" of English Life

3Citations
Citations of this article
24Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

In Victorian England, tea culture became "a fact of life" as advertising appropriated the imperial commodity's surplus values, juxtaposing a semantics of English tea's authenticity with a semiotics of its surplus enjoyment. This article makes a larger observation on English tea culture, with one of its leitmotifs as the United Kingdom Tea Company's advertisements, which were published in leading periodicals such as The Illustrated London News, The Pall Mall Magazine, and The Graphic, between 1888 and 1900. Drawing on Roland Barthes's notion of mythologies, I argue that the United Kingdom Tea Company's advertisements, among others, reconfigured and standardized a gastromythology in English culture. As tea representations became sensualized, gendered, and racialized in English culture, they performed an aesthetically augmented reality to repress the memory of an erstwhile alien product while readily assimilating its identity into the larger fold of English imperialism. Literary and advertorial mythologems of tea drinking are entangled with how specific cultural and ideological mechanisms denominate and modulate culinary tastes and taste perception. Viewing English tea culture as benign expressions of individual or cultivated tastes is ultimately an aesthetic idealism that cannot go unchallenged.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Chatterjee, A. K. (2022). The Gastromythology of English Tea Culture: On the UKTC’s Advertisements and Making Tea a “Fact” of English Life. Canadian Journal of History, 57(1), 47–80. https://doi.org/10.3138/cjh-57-1-2021-0091

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free