Coverbild der Sendung 5 ½ Moments when Alcohol Shaped the World

5 ½ Moments when Alcohol Shaped the World

Podcast von University of Sheffield Player

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Mehr 5 ½ Moments when Alcohol Shaped the World

A historical podcast series about human interactions with alcohol.

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7 Folgen

Episode Episode 6 - Half a Moment? Cover

Episode 6 - Half a Moment?

Professor Phil Withington [https://www.sheffield.ac.uk/hpdh/people/history-staff/phil-withington] and Dr Nick Groat [https://www.sheffield.ac.uk/hpdh/people/honorary/nicholas-groat] reflect on the last 60 years in the history of alcohol. They discuss technical innovation, life-style choices, ‘healthy’ drinking and the Craft Alcohol Movement and wonder whether we're living through a new moment when alcohol changed the world. Guests: Cynthia King [https://www.locksleydistilling.com/the-distillery/] and her husband John Cherry run Locksley Distilling [⁠https://www.locksleydistilling.com], a small-batch distillery in Sheffield. Among many initiatives, they’ve created a Co-Lab range of spirits, working in collaboration with select businesses and organisations such as historic properties and top restaurants. They’ve recently launched two new Co-Labs Chocolate Chilli Rum [https://www.locksleydistilling.com/shop/bullion-khoos-co-lab-chocolate-chilli-rum/] and Bloody Mary Vodka [https://www.locksleydistilling.com/shop/starmoreboss-co-lab-distilled-bloody-mary-vodka/]  Pete Brown [https://www.petebrown.net/] is an author, journalist and broadcaster specialising in food and drink. He’s the Sunday Times Magazine’s weekly beer columnist and has published numerous books including: * Clubland: How the Working Men’s Club Shaped Britain [https://www.petebrown.net/book/clubland-how-the-working-mens-club-shaped-britain/] * Craft – An Argument: Why the term Craft Beer is completely undefinable, hopelessly misunderstood and absolutely essential [https://www.amazon.co.uk/Craft-completely-undefinable-hopelessly-misunderstood/dp/1838049819] Prof Stephen Charters [https://www.mastersofwine.org/steve-charters-mw] is Professor of Wine Marketing and a researcher at Burgundy School of Business in Dijon. He is responsible for developing teaching and research programmes focusing on all aspects of the culture, history and business of wine. His research interests are in consumer behaviour, wine and place (including terroir, wine tourism, and territorial wine management) and cultures of consumption and production. He is currently involved in a project aiming to deepen our understanding of the Pinot Noir [thepinotnoirproject⁠]grape worldwide.   Prof Alex Mold [https://www.lshtm.ac.uk/aboutus/people/mold.alex] is Professor of Public Health History and Co-Head of the Doctoral College at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Her research interests include the changing nature of public health over the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, the history of substance abuse, especially illegal drugs and alcohol, and health education messaging around alcohol. Her publications include: * Alcohol, health education and changing notions of risk in Britain, 1980-1990 [https://researchonline.lshtm.ac.uk/id/eprint/4656202/]  Full transcript available here. [https://drive.google.com/file/d/1ac_o0W_L2HqjMpiDnkD5iERtu3LL5ftj/view?usp=sharing]

4. Juni 2025 - 28 min
Episode Episode 5 - Big Business and Bio-States Cover

Episode 5 - Big Business and Bio-States

Professor Phil Withington [https://www.sheffield.ac.uk/hpdh/people/history-staff/phil-withington] hears how the mass-production of beer and spirits was closely connected to industrialisation and the rise of big business, popular political movements like Temperance, and the emergence of what is sometimes called the 'bio-state'. Guests: Pete Brown [https://www.petebrown.net/about/] is an author, journalist and broadcaster specialising in food and drink. He’s the Sunday Times Magazine’s weekly beer columnist and has published numerous books including: * Clubland: How the Working Men’s Club Shaped Britain [https://www.petebrown.net/book/clubland-how-the-working-mens-club-shaped-britain/] * Craft - An Argument: Why the term Craft Beer is completely undefinable, hopelessly misunderstood and absolutely essential [https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B0882GZWXP?pf_rd_r=K9KA4CM95VYV962P7XJ9&pf_rd_p=e632fea2-678f-4848-9a97-bcecda59cb4e] Prof Virginia Berridge [https://www.lshtm.ac.uk/aboutus/people/berridge.virginia] is Professor of History and Health Policy and former Director of the Centre for History in Public Health at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. She is a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences, the Royal Historical Society, the Faculty of Public Health and of the Royal College of Physicians. She is deputy chair of the London Drugs Commission reporting to the Mayor. Her books include: * Demons: Our changing attitudes to alcohol tobacco and drugs [https://www.amazon.co.uk/Demons-changing-attitudes-alcohol-tobacco/dp/0199604983] * Public Health: A Very Short Introduction [https://www.amazon.co.uk/Public-Health-Short-Introduction-Introductions/dp/019968846X] * E-Cigarettes and the Comparative Politics of Harm Reduction [https://www.amazon.co.uk/Cigarettes-Comparative-Politics-Harm-Reduction/dp/3031236572/ref=sr_1_1?crid=1Z22N92A27FS1&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.N0sdOChWLsuC6YBupe3UnA.yUnNbUwbtBxtwDFqe7cEXE8qwrJtCkgHTYtXaOHK7aQ&dib_tag=se&keywords=E-Cigarettes+and+the+Comparative+Politics+of+Harm+Reduction.&qid=1749035308&s=books&sprefix=e-cigarettes+and+the+comparative+politics+of+harm+reduction.+%2Cstripbooks%2C67&sr=1-1] Pete Evans [https://www.linkedin.com/in/peter-evans-884a28112/?originalSubdomain=uk]is the Archives and Heritage Manager at Sheffield City Council.  Dr David Beckingham [https://www.nottingham.ac.uk/geography/people/david.beckingham] is Associate Professor in Cultural and Historical Geography at the University of Nottingham. He has published widely on aspects of alcohol regulation and temperance, most recently in the journals Rural History [https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/rural-history]and Journal of Historical Geography [https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/journal-of-historical-geography].  Full transcript available here. [https://drive.google.com/file/d/1WUe10s9-Mw1qzJOs84ij_Oq02Z42LKy7/view?usp=sharing]

4. Juni 2025 - 30 min
Episode Episode 4 - Spirits and Global Encounters Cover

Episode 4 - Spirits and Global Encounters

Professor Phil Withington [https://www.sheffield.ac.uk/hpdh/people/history-staff/phil-withington] learns how alcohol in general and spirits in particular shaped European encounters with the peoples of Africa, the Caribbean and the Americas. He also learns how elite views of indigenous drinking were not so very different to caricatures of working-class consumption closer to home. Guests: Dr Lila O’Leary [https://www.cai.cam.ac.uk/people/dr-lila-oleary-chambers] is a historian of race, slavery and commodification in the early modern Atlantic, and a research fellow at Gonville & Caius College, Cambridge. She is also the co-founder and an editorial board member for the online magazine Insurrect! [https://www.insurrecthistory.com/⁠⁠     ] Recent articles include: * Alcohol Diplomacy, Gender and Power in the Late Seventeenth-Century Gold Coast Slaving Complex in Past & Present. [https://academic.oup.com/past/article/264/1/48/7564897] Dr Deborah Toner [https://leicester.academia.edu/DeborahToner] is an Associate Professor of Modern History at the University of Leicester, whose research interests include the social, cultural and literary history of alcohol and drinking places in Mexico. She is co-convenor of the Drinking Studies Network [https://drinkingstudies.wordpress.com/], an interdisciplinary research group that brings together scholars who work on any aspect of drink and drinking culture in any society and in any time period. Publications include: * Alcohol and Nationhood in Nineteenth-Century Mexico [https://www.academia.edu/11373039/Alcohol_and_Nationhood_in_19th_Century_Mexico] Dr Angela McShane [https://warwick.academia.edu/AngelaMcShane] is Honorary Reader in History at the University of Warwick. She has recently worked collaboratively on a book [https://www.mqup.ca/our-subversive-voice-products-9780228023722.php] and website [https://oursubversivevoice.com/] and with Christopher Marsh and Andy Watt on 100 Ballads [www.100ballads.org⁠ ]. Currently she is completing a monograph on the history of the ballad trade and its politics. Full transcript available here. [https://drive.google.com/file/d/1efIUssune8FtMAiN6p4IYMPn_DV2iLsx/view?usp=sharing]

4. Juni 2025 - 27 min
Episode Episode 3 - Hops and the Origins of Western Capitalism Cover

Episode 3 - Hops and the Origins of Western Capitalism

Professor Phil Withington [https://www.sheffield.ac.uk/hpdh/people/history-staff/phil-withington] returns to medieval Europe to find out about the impact of hops on commercial brewing, the European beer trade, the drinking habits of ordinary people. Guests: Prof Richard Unger [https://history.ubc.ca/profile/richard-unger/] is Emeritus Professor of Medieval History at the University of British Columbia and a specialist in European maritime history in the medieval period. His books include: * A History of Brewing in Holland, 900 – 1900 [https://brill.com/display/title/7149?language=en] * Beer in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance [https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt3fj2zx] Dr Mark Hailwood [https://www.bristol.ac.uk/people/person/Mark-Hailwood-9550e44e-57fe-4a4b-912a-71aeb1fc7d13/] is Senior Lecturer in Early Modern History at the University of Bristol. He is a social historian of England in the period c. 1500 to 1750 with a particular interest in the relationship between historical change and the everyday lives of ordinary men and women. He is currently working on a book and podcast series on "Everyday Life in the Seventeenth-Century English Village" focusing on his hometown of Portishead in Somerset. You can learn more here. [https://www.history.org.uk/podcasts/news/4320/new-podcast-series-everyday-life-in-a-17th-centur] Dr Susan Flavin [https://www.tcd.ie/research/profiles/?profile=sflavin] is an Associate Professor of History at Trinity College, Dublin and Principle Investigator for the ERC funded project FOODCULT [https://foodcult.eu/]. Her work is grounded in interdisciplinary approaches to history and she teaches on topics such as the social and cultural history of food and drink, and gender and domesticity in Early Modern Britain and Ireland. The FoodCult project to recreate historical beer resulted in an exhibition [https://foodcult.eu/exhibition/brewing-historical-beer/] and case study [https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/historical-journal/article/understanding-early-modern-beer-an-interdisciplinary-casestudy/76C118F73B8D35FED9E5B69CB3E966FB] in The Historical Journal. This episode features two ballads from Christopher Marsh and Angela McShane, 100 Ballads [https://www.100ballads.org] Copyright details below - CC BY-NC-SA 4.0: Ballad no. 65 - Christopher Marsh and Angela McShane, ballad no. 65, A pleasant new Ballad to sing both Even and Morne/ Of the bloody murther of Sir John Barley-corne [Pepys 1.426-27]. Performers Giles Lewin and Ian Giles.  Ballad no. 6 - Christopher Marsh and Angela McShane, ballad no. 6, A most sweet Song of an English Merchant/ borne at Chichester [Roxburghe 1.104-05]. Performers Andy Watts, Giles Lewin, Steno Vitale and John Kirkpatrick.  Full transcript available here. [https://drive.google.com/file/d/1uaIQbIC_E7FVB2ma6ppMp5Y5P1gYTFgu/view?usp=sharing]

4. Juni 2025 - 26 min
Episode Episode 2 - Wine and the Rise of Mediterranean World Cover

Episode 2 - Wine and the Rise of Mediterranean World

Dr Nick Groat [https://www.sheffield.ac.uk/hpdh/people/honorary/nicholas-groat] hears how wine was central in the everyday lives of Greeks and Romans and learns how it transformed from being the common currency of the Mediterranean world to one of the drivers of Roman imperialism. Guests: Dr Jane Rempel [https://www.sheffield.ac.uk/hpdh/people/history-staff/jane-rempel] is an Assistant Professor of Classics at Cambridge University and a Fellow at Clare College, Cambridge. She trained as a Classical Archaeologist and her research interests focus on Greek archaeology, specifically issues surrounding colonisation and social interaction at the margins of the ancient Greek world. The Black Sea region is a major focus of her research and teaching.  Prof Mary Beard [https://www.classics.cam.ac.uk/directory/mary-beard] is a Classicist specialising in Ancient Rome and Classics editor of the Times Literary Supplement. She’s a Professor of Classics at the University of Cambridge, a Fellow of Newnham College, Cambridge. She’s the author of numerous books on society and culture in the ancient world and a regular contributor to radio, television and podcasts. Dr Emlyn Dodd [https://ics.sas.ac.uk/people/dr-emlyn-dodd] is Senior Lecturer at the Institute of Classical Studies, University of London, and was Assistant Director at the British School at Rome from 2021–23. He has published extensively on ancient wine production in Greek and Roman antiquity, with his research featured regularly in public media, and has authored or co-edited the books: * Roman and Late Antique wine production in the eastern Mediterranean [https://www.archaeopress.com/Archaeopress/Products/9781789694024] * Methods in ancient wine archaeology: scientific approaches in Roman contexts [https://www.academia.edu/111979075/Methods_in_Ancient_Wine_Archaeology_Scientific_Approaches_in_Roman_contexts] * Vine-growing and winemaking in the Roman world Full transcript available ⁠here.⁠ [https://drive.google.com/file/d/1LdmYHu4sNtcopOTvW8vvANKSQ_qhan5B/view?usp=sharing]

4. Juni 2025 - 26 min
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