Clean Hands before Empire
Por Foster, Julia
Publicado por epubli
English
2026
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Disponible en 6 librerías
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Sobre este libro
Europe did not adopt the fork because it loved elegance. It adopted the fork because crowded cities, contagious disease, and changing ideas about the human body made older habits increasingly difficult to defend. What began as ridicule inside medieval sermons eventually became a revolution in personal conduct.
Drawing from palace inventories, merchant correspondence, and Renaissance etiquette manuals, this book reconstructs the political life of the dining table. Aristocrats feared appearing weak if they used forks, while church authorities associated elaborate utensils with moral excess. Fingers represented strength, immediacy, and tradition. Metal prongs suggested distance from God's creation and imitation of foreign courts. Yet as plague outbreaks reshaped urban life, Europeans slowly connected bodily control with social order. Dining practices became part of statecraft, diplomacy, and elite education.
The rise of hygienic culture changed not only meals but ideas of civility itself. Across early modern Europe, utensils entered households alongside new concepts of discipline, cleanliness, and public respectability. The story of the fork reveals how ordinary objects quietly reorganize entire civilizations.
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