In popular memory the repeal of US Prohibition in 1933 signaled alcohol’s decisive triumph in a decades-long culture war. But as Lisa Jacobson reveals, alcohol’s respectability and mass market success were neither sudden nor assured. It took a world war and a battalion of public relations experts and tastemakers to transform wine, beer, and whiskey into emblems of the American good life. Alcohol producers and their allies—a group that included scientists, trade associations, restaurateurs, home economists, cookbook authors, and New Deal planners—powered a publicity machine that linked alcohol to wartime food crusades and new ideas about the place of pleasure in modern American life. In this deeply researched and engagingly written book, Jacobson shows how the yearnings of ordinary consumers and military personnel shaped alcohol’s cultural reinvention and put intoxicating pleasures at the center of broader debates about the rights and obligations of citizens.
Lisa Jacobson is Associate Professor of History at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and author of Raising Consumers: Children and the American Mass Market in the Early Twentieth Century.
List of IllustrationsAcknowledgmentsIntroductionPART ONE. CHARTING ALCOHOL’S PATH TO REDEMPTION1 The Potent Politics of Weak Brews2 A New Deal for Alcohol?3 Fermented Beverages and the Gospel of Moderation4 Spiritous Beverages and the Muddled Meanings of ModerationPART TWO. THE POLITICS OF PLEASURE5 Beer Goes to War6 Whiskey, Weapons, and the Wartime State7 Wine and Culinary Innovation on the Kitchen Front8 Rank Privilege: The Politics of Intoxicating Pleasures in the US MilitaryEpilogue: The Power and Limits of ReinventionAbbreviationsNotesBibliographyIndex
"An excellent addition to any library of distilled spirits, wine and beer."