Advertisement
Join Dr Julie Banham as she looks at some of the ways in which daily life in England has been shaped, supported and stimulated by tea. Since its arrival in England, tea has been seen as a luxury, an everyday essential, a benefit and a threat to health, a stimulant: good, a stimulant: bad, a source of taxation and cause of smuggling, an instigator of wars and the collapse of the moral order, the cause of male decadence. It’s been viewed as an aid to polite and genteel behaviours, an innovator of new shipping designs, an initiator of rituals, the foundation of scandal and gossip and, of course, the harbinger of a vast array of new manufacturers and merchandise.
Tea has been such a part of our national life; it is difficult to imagine a crisis or celebration which isn’t accompanied by a kettle.
Suggested donation £5, booking recommended
https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/lunchtime-talk-the-terrors-of-tea-tickets-1117588560469
Image: Jean-Etienne Liotard, Still Life: Tea Set, c1781-3
Advertisement
Event Venue & Nearby Stays
The Millennium Gallery, Sheffield, United Kingdom
Tickets