Tea (rec.drink.tea) Discussion relating to tea, the world's second most consumed beverage (after water), made by infusing or boiling the leaves of the tea plant (C. sinensis or close relatives) in water.

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1 (permalink)   Report Post  
Penelope
 
Posts: n/a
Default new book about tea

Tea: Addiction, Explotation and Empire by Roy Moxham ...

from the Amazon.co.uk site ...

Roy Moxham is Conservator of the University of London Library and a
teacher in the University's Institute of English Studies. His first
book The Great Hedge Of India was the extraordinary story of his quest
for one of the forgotten wonders of the world. Now, aided by his
experiences as a tea planter in early 1960s Africa, Roy has written
the definitive book on the history of Tea, which is appropriately
subtitled Addiction, Exploitation And Empire.

Dominic Kennerk, Waterstone's Online: I never realized what a murky
history there could be behind something as sedate as a cup of tea.

Roy Moxham: When I first planned this book, I had no idea of the 'dark
history' my researches would uncover. I merely thought that growing
tea was something I knew a fair amount about, that I would enjoy
finding out more of the history of tea, and that I could make both the
growing and the history interesting for a general audience. My own
time as a tea planter was full of comic episodes, and I have described
some of these. The violence and oppression of earlier times came as a
total surprise.

Dominic Kennerk: Do you think the suffering caused by the tea industry
in India, Africa and Ceylon was more indicative of the 'age of
empire', than of the industry itself?

Roy Moxham: I am very wary of generalizing about the British Empire. I
have always thought that there were both good and bad facets to the
Empire. For example, the British were instrumental in suppressing the
Arab-run slave trade in Eastern Africa to the benefit of the people
there. On the other hand, the slave trade the British themselves set
up to work the sugar plantations in the Caribbean was terrible for the
West Africans. Similarly you cannot generalize too much about the tea
industry as a whole. In Darjeeling, for example, the conditions for
the tea workers were no worse, and perhaps better, than was the norm
in India. In Assam, however, the British behaved abominably. Empires
are run for the benefit of the rulers, not the ruled. Nevertheless,
there has always been a percentage of the ruling elite who have done
their personal best to behave humanely. Unfortunately, they have often
been in a minority. Conditions on the tea estates markedly improved
after about 1920, as more liberal attitudes inside Britain filtered
through to the colonies. Before then, what Sir Harry Johnston, the
first governor of what is now Malawi, wrote in 1897 probably applied
across much of the Empi
The ideal of the average European trader and planter in Tropical
Africa would be a country where the black millions toil unremittingly
for the benefit of the white man. They would see that the Negroes were
well fed and not treated with harshness, but anything like free will
as to whether they went to work or not, or any attempt at competing
with the white man as regards education or skilled labour would not be
tolerated.
That, at least, was an improvement on what had happened in Nineteenth
Century Assam.

Dominic Kennerk: You mention that British Military excursions, sent to
protect the opium for tea trade in China, had repercussions that
echoed down to modern China.

Roy Moxham: The opium that the British forced the Chinese to legalize
continued to cause huge social problems in China until the middle of
the Twentieth Century. Hong Kong, which became British as a result of
the Opium Wars, only reverted to China in 1997, and this soured
relations between Britain and China until then. The Chinese taught
their children to dislike the British for what they had done to China,
and to distrust the West in general. These attitudes are only now
being dissipated.

Dominic Kennerk: Aside from much of the hardship caused by the Tea
industry, you do show how it was an age of adventure and exploration
by often intriguing characters. Are there any individuals you
identified with?

Roy Moxham: I found Robert Fortune a very sympathetic character. He
was, of course, a most distinguished botanist and plant collector,
which I shall never be. He was also exceptionally fearless. However, I
can relate to his travels, often in disguise, across China in search
of tea. In a small way, it reminded me of my travels in dangerous
areas of India searching for remnants of the Great Hedge.

Dominic Kennerk: How much did your unique perspective as a tea planter
in Africa, in the early 1960s, help you write the book?

Roy Moxham: Quite a bit. Tea is a complicated crop to grow and
process, so it helped to be familiar with the details. The biggest
advantage, however, was to be able to identify with a forgotten world
- where young British men, with no particular expertise, went out to
the tropics and took charge of vast estates and workforces.

Dominic Kennerk: Did researching and writing the book affect the way
you looked back on your time in Africa?

Roy Moxham: Yes. I had no idea of how the early planters had acquired
their huge acreages of land, or of how the tax system had been
introduced to force the Africans into working for the Europeans.

Dominic Kennerk: There are many fascinating things in the book and I
particularly liked the culture around tea that developed in China.

Roy Moxham: I too was struck by the Chinese reverence for the finest
teas. I was particularly impressed with the precautions taken against
the leaf being tainted when plucked - how the pluckers, supposedly
virgins, were forbidden to eat garlic, onions and strong spices. And
of how they wore silk gloves, with slits in the tips, and snipped off
the tea shoots with their, frequently washed, fingernails. In later
years, the shoots were cut off with gold scissors.

Dominic Kennerk: I like the jacket image for the book, and there are
some terrific illustrations used throughout. How important are these?

Roy Moxham: The cover picture is by Edward Miller. He also did the
cover for The Great Hedge Of India, which was much admired. The tea
cover is deliberately redolent of the hedge one. The theme was my
idea, as I wanted something to make people realize that this was a
violent history, and not about tea-cosies. I think the illustrations
are important to give the book a lighter feel. This is not an academic
book, but there is a lot of historical information, and I wanted to
emphasize that it was for a general audience. My favourite picture is
of 'Tapner & Cobby & the Smugglers going to hang Chater the Custom
House officer in a well.' All very gruesome, but the smugglers look so
elegant!

Dominic Kennerk: Are there any particular writers or books that
influenced or inspired you in writing of Tea?

Roy Moxham: Seeds of Change, by Henry Hobhouse, is a little classic of
this genre, and I saw how I could amplify his approach to concentrate
on a single plant and its influence. While researching Tea I was very
taken with Peter Ward Fay's The Opium War, 1840 - 1842, which is both
scholarly and readable, a rare combination these days, when good
narrative is often despised by academics.

Dominic Kennerk: Have you a favourite tea?

Roy Moxham: When I was a planter, much of our tea went to Typhoo, and
I developed a liking for that kind of slightly superior 'navvy tea.' I
have now switched to Teadirect, which is similar. While writing the
book, I tried many kinds of tea, and found little I really liked. The
one exception, somewhat surprisingly, was Japanese green tea. I find
this intensely green tea most refreshing. One of my students is
Japanese, and she did a Japanese tea ceremony for me, which was
immensely interesting - more for the etiquette than for the tea, which
is particularly astringent!

Dominic Kennerk: Current conditions in some of the tea growing
countries are still poor. Towards the end of the book you say there
are laudable 'Fair-trade' organizations, such as Teadirect who are
trying to improve this, but that very significant change needs to come
about from inter-governmental co-operation. Why do you think there is
little sign of this?

Roy Moxham: I see very little prospect of the tea producing countries
co-operating to reduce production to raise the price of tea to a
'fair' level. Their people are often desperate to make any money,
however little. This is a consequence of wages in the developing world
being driven down by unfair competition from the rest of the world.
Probably the best chance of raising the tea workers' wages is for the
World Trade Agreement to be reformed so that there is a fairer market.
We need an end to the huge subsidies in Europe and America and to the
dumping of the surpluses that undermine producers in other countries.
This would raise all wages in the developing countries, including
those of the tea workers. We should all press for fairer world trade.

Dominic Kennerk: What are you up to next, Roy?

Roy Moxham: I retire from being conservator of the University of
London Library in 2005, and then intend to divide my time between
London and India. I have one or two ideas for books about India, which
will need time there to research. I am currently doing what research I
can here in London, to give me a flying start.


Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Vintage book Summertime cookery book 20s/30s FA JaneyP General Cooking 0 02-12-2006 12:20 AM
Diabetic Diete Bernestein Complete Book in Alt.binaries.e-book.technical [email protected] Diabetic 0 17-11-2006 12:37 AM
FS Book: Raw : The Uncook Book: New Vegetarian Food for Life [email protected] Marketplace 0 12-04-2005 10:31 AM
FS Book: Raw : The Uncook Book: New Vegetarian Food for Life [email protected] Marketplace 0 12-04-2005 10:31 AM
Theatre Recipe Book vintage cook book FA Sarah Mc. General Cooking 0 05-11-2004 01:20 AM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 02:54 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 FoodBanter.com.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about Food and drink"