Empire and indigestion: Materializing tannins in the Indian tea industry

Author:

Besky Sarah1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. ILR School, Cornell University, USA

Abstract

In the mid-1800s, plantation-produced tea from India came onto the British market. Tea retailers blended this more malty and black tea with the lighter Chinese-grown tea to which consumers had become accustomed. By the turn of the 20th century, blending helped Empire-grown tea supplant Chinese-grown tea on the market. Scholars of tea have shown how British tea companies working in South Asia stoked racialized fears that Chinese tea arrived in Britain in an adulterated state, laden with impurities that included dyes, perfumes and even human sweat. This article describes how concerns about protecting tea leaves from outside adulteration gave way to concerns about the potential digestive threat that lay inside tea leaves themselves. Medical journals linked the increased consumption of Indian teas to a population-wide ‘epidemic’ of indigestion. The most cited culprits in this epidemic were tannins, chemical compounds that were also thought to give black tea its characteristic bitterness and color. The normalization of black tea consumption among the British public was not just a work of marketing or branding but a work of resolving uncertainty about what tannins were at a material, biophysical level. As this uncertainty was resolved scientifically, tea was materialized not as a singular, unified product but as an active chemical assemblage.

Funder

American Institute of Indian Studies

Brown University

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

History and Philosophy of Science,General Social Sciences,History

Cited by 3 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Par-delà le désastre;Revue d'anthropologie des connaissances;2022-12-01

2. Fermented Black Tea and Its Relationship with Gut Microbiota and Obesity: A Mini Review;Fermentation;2022-11-04

3. Famine, tea, and bread in Ireland: C282Y and modern human microevolution;American Journal of Biological Anthropology;2022-04-08

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