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According to many historians, the English Enlightenment may never have happened were it not for coffeehouses, the public sphere where poets, critics, philosophers, legal minds, and other intellectual gadflies regularly met to chatter about the pressing concerns of the day. And yet, writes scholar Bonnie Calhoun, âit was not for the taste of coffee that people flocked to these establishments.â
Indeed, one irate pamphleteer defined coffee, which was at this time without cream or sugar and usually watered down, as âpuddle-water, and so ugly in colour and taste [sic].â
No syrupy, high-dollar Macchiatos or smooth, creamy lattes kept them coming back. Rather than the beverage, âit was the nature of the institution that caused its popularity to skyrocket during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.â
How, then, were proprietors to achieve economic growth? Like the owner of the first English coffee-shop did in 1652, London merchant Samuel Price deployed the time-honored tactics of the mountebank, using advertising to make all sorts of claims for coffeeâs many âvirtuesâ in order to convince consumers to drink the stuff at home. In the 1690 broadside above, writes Rebecca Onion at Slate, Price made a âlitany of claims for coffeeâs health benefits,â some of which âweâd recognize today and others that seem far-fetched.â In the latter category are assertions that âcoffee-drinking populations didnât get common diseasesâ like kidney stones or âScurvey, Gout, Dropsie.â Coffee could also, Price claimed, improve hearing and âswooningâ and was âexperimentally good to prevent Miscarriage.â
Among these spurious medical benefits is listed a genuine effect of coffeeâits relief of âlethargy.â Priceâs other beveragesââChocolette, and Thee or Teaââreceive much less emphasis since they didnât require a hard sell. No one needs to be convinced of the benefits of coffee these daysâindeed many of us canât function without it. But as we sit in corporate chain cafes, glued to smartphones and laptop screens and mostly ignoring each other, our coffeehouses have become somewhat pale imitations of those vibrant Enlightenment-era establishments where, writes Calhoun, “men [though rarely women] were encouraged to engage in both verbal and written discourse with regard for wit over rank.â
via Slate
Related Content:
âThe Vertue of the COFFEE Drinkâ: An Ad for Londonâs First Cafe Printed Circa 1652
Honoré de Balzac Writes About âThe Pleasures and Pains of Coffee,â and His Epic Coffee Addiction
Black Coffee: Documentary Covers the History, Politics & Economics of the âMost Widely Taken Legal Drugâ
Josh Jones is a writer and musician based in Durham, NC. Follow him at @jdmagness.
“The Virtues of Coffee” Explained in 1690 Ad: The Cure for Lethargy, Scurvy, Dropsy, Gout & More is a post from: Open Culture. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Google Plus, or get our Daily Email. And don’t miss our big collections of Free Online Courses, Free Online Movies, Free eBooks, Free Audio Books, Free Foreign Language Lessons, and MOOCs.
The post “The Virtues of Coffee” Explained in 1690 Ad: The Cure for Lethargy, Scurvy, Dropsy, Gout & More appeared first on Open Culture.
âThe Virtues of Coffeeâ Explained in 1690 Ad: The Cure for Lethargy, Scurvy, Dropsy, Gout & More
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