Potato Potato
    • £8.99

Publisher Description

Object Lessons is a series of short, beautifully designed books about the hidden lives of ordinary things.



Baked potatoes, Bombay potatoes, pommes frites . . . everyone eats potatoes, but what do they mean? To the United Nations they mean global food security (potatoes are the world's fourth most important food crop). To 18th-century philosophers they promised happiness. Nutritionists warn that too many increase your risk of hypertension. For the poet Seamus Heaney they conjured up both his mother and the 19th-century Irish famine.



What stories lie behind the ordinary potato? The potato is entangled with the birth of the liberal state and the idea that individuals, rather than communities, should form the building blocks of society. Potatoes also speak about family, and our quest for communion with the universe. Thinking about potatoes turns out to be a good way of thinking about some of the important tensions in our world.



Object Lessons is published in partnership with an essay series in The Atlantic.

GENRE
Non-Fiction
RELEASED
2019
21 March
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
144
Pages
PUBLISHER
Bloomsbury Academic
SIZE
3.2
MB
Food Food
2008
Hungry City Hungry City
2013
White Bread White Bread
2012
Locavore Locavore
2010
Around the Tuscan Table Around the Tuscan Table
2004
Letters to a Young Farmer Letters to a Young Farmer
2017
Feeding the People Feeding the People
2020
Epistolary Selves Epistolary Selves
2016
The Body of the Conquistador The Body of the Conquistador
2012
Ocean Ocean
2020
High Heel High Heel
2019
Pub Pub
2025
Veil Veil
2017
Hood Hood
2016
Bread Bread
2016