The Moral and Market Economies of Bread: Regulation and Reform in Vienna, 1775-1885
By (Author) Jonas Albrecht
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
11th July 2024
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Cultural studies: food and society
European history
330.943613
Hardback
280
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
From 1770s the Vienna bread market was rocked by a series of politico-economic and technological changes that questioned the way this everyday foodstuff was sold and produced. In this book, Jonas Albrecht explores how this reconfiguration of the bread market had wide-reaching and significant consequences for a society who relied on this foodstuff to live. Before 1860 the production and selling of bread was embedded into a moral economy with distinct regulations. But as the grain market expanded and new cereal varieties arrived from the empires peripheries reformers sought to create a free market through liberalising reforms. The Moral and Market Economies of Bread shows that while terminating market regulation did mobilise and diversify Viennas bread market in spatial terms, it intensified inequality among consumers. As opaque prices, non-transparent market procedures and diverging power relations between producers and consumers led to unrest, city officials and bakers struggled to meet the shortcomings of the free market from within. This book brings economic, social and urban histories together and employs a spatial approach and GIS methods to explore the relationship between market and society, and capitalism at large.
Jonas M. Albrecht is Research Assistant in the Department of Social and Economic History at Johannes Kepler University Linz, Austria.