What's new

Welcome to App4Day.com

Join us now to get access to all our features. Once registered and logged in, you will be able to create topics, post replies to existing threads, give reputation to your fellow members, get your own private messenger, and so, so much more. It's also quick and totally free, so what are you waiting for?

Tea Consumption, Politics, and Revolution, 1773-1776 [Audiobook]

F

Frankie

Moderator
Joined
Jul 7, 2023
Messages
101,954
Reaction score
0
Points
36
80b741fbffda95917ba3440baa214357.jpeg

Free Download Tea: Consumption, Politics, and Revolution, 1773-1776 (Audiobook)
English | ASIN: B0CP9Z1LQV | 2023 | 14 hours and 12 minutes | M4B@64 kbps | 399 MB
Author: James R. Fichter
Narrator: Jonathan Yen

In Tea James Fichter reveals that despite the so-called Boston Tea Party in 1773, two other large shipments of tea from the East India Company survived and were ultimately drunk in North America. The survival of these shipments shaped the politics of the years ahead and hint at the enduring potency of consumerism in revolutionary politics. Tea protests were widespread in 1774, but, Fichter argues, so were tea advertisements and tea sales. Such protests were noisy and sometimes misleading performances, not clear signs that tea consumption was unpopular. Revolutionaries vilified tea in their propaganda and prohibited the importation and consumption of tea and British goods.​

Yet merchant ledgers reveal these goods were still widely sold and consumed in 1775. Colonists supported Patriots more than they abided by non-consumption. When Congress ended its prohibition against tea in 1776, it reasoned that the ban was too widely violated to enforce. War was a more effective means to resist Parliament, after all, than was a boycott, and as rebel arms advanced, Patriots seized and used tea and other goods Britons left behind. By 1776 protesters sought tea, and, objecting to its high price, they redistributed rather than destroyed it. But as Fichter demonstrates in Tea, the commodity was not, by then, a symbol of the British state, but of American consumerism.

Recommend Download Link Hight Speed | Please Say Thanks Keep Topic Live

Rapidgator
om2zd.zip.html
NitroFlare
om2zd.zip
Uploadgig
om2zd.zip
Fikper
om2zd.zip.html
Links are Interchangeable - No Password - Single Extraction
 
Top Bottom