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Feeding the People in Wartime Britain
By (Author) Professor Bryce Evans
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
5th May 2022
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Cultural studies: food and society
First World War
Second World War
Modern warfare
363.8094109044
Hardback
200
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
While the history of food on the home front in wartime Britain has mostly focused on rationing, this book reveals the importance and scale of nation-wide communal dining schemes during this era. Welcomed by some as a symbol of a progressive future in which wasteful home dining would disappear, and derided by others for threatening the social order, these sites of food and eating attracted great political and cultural debate. Using extensive primary source material, Feeding the People in Wartime Britain examines the cuisine served in these communal restaurants and the people who used them. It challenges the notion that communal eating played a marginal role in wartime food policy and reveals the impact they had in advancing nutritional understanding and new food technologies. Comparing them to similar ventures in mainland Europe and understanding the role of propaganda from the Ministry of Food in their success, Evans unearths this neglected history of emergency public feeding and relates it to contemporary debates around food policy in times of crisis.
Bryce Evans is Professor of History at Liverpool Hope University, UK. An expert on food history he is the author of five books including Food and Aviation in Twentieth Century Britain (Bloomsbury, 2020) and has written numerous journal articles.