By Jonathan Yardley
Iain Gately, a British writer who six years ago published Tobacco: A Cultural History of How an Exotic Plant Seduced Civilization, now turns his attention to booze, a subject, it goes without saying, of similar character but considerably larger import. Drink: A Cultural History of Alcohol,
is thorough, informative, briskly readable and witty. It is likely to
be enjoyed more by those who take the occasional (or more than
occasional) drink than by those who do not, but a central theme should
be of interest to all readers: Like it or not, alcohol has been and
always will be with us, an important part of human history, culture and
society. It can't be wished away, as should be understood by Americans
above all, having suffered through Prohibition and its appalling
consequences.
Better, instead, to face up to the inescapable
reality of it and try to understand the many ways in which, over the
ages, we have used and abused it, profited and suffered from it,
refined it and been changed by it. Gately gets down to that business in
his opening paragraph:
"Alcohol is a fundamental part of Western
culture. It is the most controversial part of our diet, simultaneously
nourishing and intoxicating the human frame. Its equivocal influence
over civilization can be equated to the polar characters of Dr. Jekyll
and Mr. Hyde. At times its philanthropic side has appeared to be in the
ascendant, at others the psychopath has been at large. Throughout
history, the place of alcohol in our meals, medicines, and leisure
activities has been a matter of fierce debate. Whereas some cultures
have distinguished it as a sacred fluid, whose consumption should be
limited to ceremonial occasions, others have treated it as a kind of
food and ignored, or accommodated, any incidental effects that it might
have upon the psyche, and a few have even tried to exclude it from
society altogether. Such differing views have often been concurrent,
thus increasing the mystery surrounding alcohol. In both ancient
Greece, and the present millennium, it has been credited with the
powers of inspiration and destruction."
To the ancient Greeks, alcohol was an essential part of a civilized society: "Our word wine derives from their oin, whose consumption was considered to be both one of the defining characteristics of Hellenic civilization and a point of difference between its members and the population of the rest of the world, whom they termed barbaroi,
or barbarians." Rome, "the next great drinking civilization to emerge
in the classical world," was transformed "from a sober society,
suspicious of both alcohol and drunkenness, to a major producer,
populated with practiced and discriminating drinkers," and as its
empire spread, so too did its permissive attitudes toward alcohol.
Though
Christianity is often associated in the popular mind with opposition to
alcohol, the historical truth suggests otherwise. From the beginning,
"the single most important rite of the Christians was the ceremony of
the Eucharist, at which they gathered to share bread and wine, in
accordance with the instructions of their founder," yet Christianity
"differentiated this sacred obligation from secular tippling, which it
discouraged, except in moderation." Later, holy orders, in particular
the Cistercians, played essential roles in the development of
sophisticated techniques for making wine and beer, and to this day some
beverages are closely identified with their monastic origins.
The
subsequent history of alcohol is one of growth in consumption and
acceptance punctuated by periods of reaction and temperance. In the
Middle Ages it was the universal "panacea, recommended by such
luminaries as Arnald of Villanova (d. 1315) as a cure for almost any ailment." In his Big Book of Distillation
(1512), Hieronymous Braunschweig wrote of aqua vitae: "It eases
diseases coming of cold. It comforts the heart. It heals all old and
new sores on the head. It causes a good color in a person . . . it
eases the pain in the teeth and causes sweet breath . . . it heals the
short-winded. It causes good digestion and appetite . . . and takes
away belching . . . . It gives also courage in a young person and
causes him to have a good memory."
The development of
distillation -- which was discovered and perfected by Muslims --
greatly altered the world of alcohol. The rise of strong drink,
especially rum and gin, had repercussions far beyond the mere
consumption of alcohol. Rum was a driving force in the slave trade and
contributed mightily to many celebrated New England fortunes. It was
also used by colonists as a "gift or sweetener" for Native Americans,
whose fondness for and susceptibility to it produced unhappy
repercussions that persist into the 21st century. Gin became common in
England in the early 1700s, setting London off on a prolonged,
spectacular and destructive spree: "In 1700, the average English adult
drank a third of a gallon of gin per annum. By 1723, statistics
suggested that every man, woman, and child in London knocked back more
than a pint of gin per head per week," resulting in "shocking levels of
drunkenness," chiefly among the poor. Gin was employed by the British
elite to distract and palliate the poor, but finally things got so bad
that corrective legislation was enacted, and the binge abated.
Whisky
-- spelled with an "e" in the American colonies -- was a part of the
heritage of the Scotch Irish and was distilled wherever they settled,
hence the great single malts of Scotland and the equally great if
entirely different bourbons of Kentucky and Tennessee. The imposition
in 1791 by the new federal government of an excise on whiskey was
vehemently opposed in Pennsylvania and led to the Whiskey Rebellion of
1794, one of the first important challenges to George Washington's authority, one he met swiftly and firmly.
Young America
unquestionably was a nation of boozers: "In 1810 federal statistics
show that the six main whiskey-producing states together distilled
twice as many gallons of whiskey per annum as there were people in
America . . . . If statistics could predict the effect of drink on a
population, by rights Americans should have been languishing en masse
in emaciated heaps, their birthrate and life expectancy should have
collapsed, and crime should have exploded."
None of this
happened, but these excessive drinking habits led, perhaps inevitably,
to the temperance movement, which has been a persistent presence in
American life. It too has had its excesses, most catastrophically
Prohibition, but organizations such as Mothers Against Drunk Driving
(MADD) have had a positive influence in encouraging, if not abstinence,
moderation. "The forces of temperance were on the rise in the 1980s,"
Gately writes, "and better provided than ever before with medical and
statistical ammunition to take on the demon drink. Moreover, a dry
spirit permeated the age. American consumption was in decline . . . .
Consumer tastes were changing. It was chic to look tanned, trim, and
toned." That is true today, but my own observation suggests that the
20-something urban professionals of 2008 are more into alcohol than
were their counterparts two decades ago.
In taking us from
ancient Greece to MADD, Gately doesn't miss a beat, at least none that
I can identify. From the Australian wine industry to boozing as a "male
prerogative" in Japan; from Louis Pasteur's discovery in 1862 of the
central role played by yeast in converting "the sugars in wine and beer
to alcohol"; from the fad for absinthe and its eventual prohibition in
many places; from the shift away from saloons to drinking at home; to
the staggering popularity in Hong Kong of French Cognac -- it's all
here, authoritatively and often amusingly recounted. As an example of
the latter, I have special fondness for this paragraph:
"Other
British writers followed [Oscar] Wilde west [in the 1880s], and all
were equally enamored with the liquid hospitality they received in
Pacific America. Rudyard Kipling,
who found San Francisco a 'mad city -- inhabited for the most part by
perfectly insane people whose women are of remarkable beauty,' was much
taken by the Pisco punch, a drink then in vogue, whose
principal ingredient was a clear Peruvian brandy. Sweet to the taste,
yet highly potent, this ambrosia inspired Kipling to speculate on its
composition: 'I have a theory it is compounded of cherubs' wings, the
glory of a tropical dawn, the red clouds of sunset, and fragments of
lost epics by dead masters.' "
Enough. Since this review began by quoting Gately's opening words, let's end it with his closing ones: " Salud, Kan pei, Chin-chin, Prost, Yum sing, Skol, Slainte, À votre santé, Na zdrowie, The king o'er the water, or just plain Cheers!" ·