Novel topic No 8 - the Evils of Tea
An
odd article in phys.org:
Poor women who drank tea were viewed as irresponsible as whisky drinkers in early 19th-century Ireland, new research by Durham University has unearthed.
Critics at the time declared that the practice of tea drinking – viewed as a harmless pastime in most past and present societies – was contributing to the stifling of Ireland's economic growth, and was clearly presented as reckless and uncontrollable. Women who drank tea wasted their time and money, it was said, drawing them away from their duty to care for their husbands and home. It was felt this traditionally female responsibility was vital to progressing the national economy.
Pamphlets published in England at the time suggest that the concerns about tea drinking were also felt widely outside Ireland. Some believed it threatened the wholesome diet of British peasants and symbolised damage to the social order and hierarchies.
According to the Durham University paper, published in the academic journal Literature and History today (5 Dec) and funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council, reformers singled out tea drinking amongst peasant women as a practice which needed to be stamped out to improve the Irish economy and society.
Author Dr Helen O'Connell, Lecturer in English Studies at Durham University, who analysed pamphlets and literature from that time, said: "Peasant women were condemned for putting their feet up with a cup of tea when they should be getting a hearty evening meal ready for their hard-working husbands.
This is the best bit:
Pamphlets the reformers distributed to peasant households lambasted tea drinking as a luxury poor women could not afford and which could even cause addiction, illicit longing and revolutionary sympathies. It was also said that tea drinking could even be akin to being a member of a secret society, a belief which heightened political anxieties at a time of counter revolution within the Union of Britain and Ireland.
Dr Helen O'Connell said: "The prospect of poor peasant women squandering already scarce resources on fashionable commodities such as tea was a worry but it also implied that drinking tea could even express a form of revolutionary feminism for these women.
"If that wasn't enough, there were also supposedly drug-like qualities of tea, an exotic substance from China, which was understood to become addictive over time."
Yeah kinda funny, except that tea contains caffeine and tannin - both stimulants; drinking enough can 'speed' you up. So it is drug taking.
ReplyDeleteThe last line you quote is a bit naive in fact:
""If that wasn't enough, there were also supposedly drug-like qualities of tea"
Guys, it DOES have drug-like qualities, because it contains two addictive drugs. The popularity of tea is in part due to its stimulant effect.
So the patronizing, mocking tone of this article is a bit misplaced. It's entirely possible that, unlike other countries, there was a bit of a trend at the time for using tea as effectively a kind of speed.
Hiya Stevie, if I was an overworked peasant lady having a well-earned cup of tea I reckon the only 'illicit longing' I would be feeling would be for a sleep rather than just a bit of a lie down with some hairy ape who, so the pamphlet would doubtless believe, should be hard at work doing something else more productive elsewhere anyway.
ReplyDeleteCheers, and in case you haven't heard, some people at the Cat have pleaded for you and Doomlord has granted amnesty - and it wasn't even me doing the pleading - so others show generosity in allowing your special brand of chatter, just as they allow mine.
Lizzie B.
See ya.
So did you really get banned from the Cat then Steve? That's bizarre, considering they even kept the Bird on for years without banning.
ReplyDelete