Spice Mill

Spice Mill
Title Spice Mill PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Total Pages 1268
Release 1912
Genre Coffee industry
ISBN

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Simmon's Spice Mill

Simmon's Spice Mill
Title Simmon's Spice Mill PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Total Pages 740
Release 1916
Genre Coffee industry
ISBN

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The Spice Mill

The Spice Mill
Title The Spice Mill PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Total Pages 2048
Release 1921
Genre Coffee industry
ISBN

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The Spice Mill

The Spice Mill
Title The Spice Mill PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Total Pages 2136
Release 1922
Genre Coffee industry
ISBN

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Spice Mill

Spice Mill
Title Spice Mill PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Total Pages 1016
Release 1910
Genre Coffee industry
ISBN

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Simmon's Spice Mill

Simmon's Spice Mill
Title Simmon's Spice Mill PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Total Pages 832
Release 1916
Genre Coffee industry
ISBN

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Coffee, Society, and Power in Latin America

Coffee, Society, and Power in Latin America
Title Coffee, Society, and Power in Latin America PDF eBook
Author William Roseberry
Publisher Johns Hopkins University Press
Total Pages 330
Release 1995-01-01
Genre History
ISBN 9780801848841

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In January 1927 Gus Comstock, a barbershop porter in the small Minnesota town of Fergus Falls, drank eighty cups of coffee in seven hours and fifteen minutes. The New York Times reported that near the end, amid a cheering crowd, the man's "gulps were labored, but a physician examining him found him in pretty good shape." The event was part of a marathon coffee-drinking spree set off two years earlier by news from the Commerce Department that coffee imports to the United States amounted to five hundred cups per year per person. In Coffee, Society, and Power in Latin America, a distinguished international group of historians, anthropologists, and sociologists examine the production, processing, and marketing of this important commodity. Using coffee as a common denominator and focusing on landholding patterns, labor mobilization, class structure, political power, and political ideologies, the authors examine how Latin American countries of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries responded to the growing global demand for coffee. This unique volume offers an integrated comparative study of class formation in the coffee zones of Latin America as they were incorporated into the world economy. It offers a new theoretical and methodological approach to comparative historical analysis and will serve as a critique and counter to those who stress the homogenizing tendencies of export agriculture. The book will be of interest not only to experts on coffee economies but also to students and scholars of Latin America, labor history, the economics ofdevelopment, and political economy.