Reviews
Jonathan Rees's new biography of Wiley, The Chemistry of Fear: Harvey Wiley's Fight for Pure Food, is not only about Wiley, but about scientific progress, the meaning of food and health, progressivism, the bureaucratic state, and that place where science and publicity meet. It's a great read.
In The Chemistry of Fear, Rees has created a bridge from the early modern history of the pure food movement to contemporary food studies that details the enduring legacy of Dr. Wiley, while challenging readers to grapple with the complexities and contradictions of his life and work....Rees's book should empower and inspire us to challenge our own ideas about "pure," "good," and "safe" foods.
Providing a history of how Americans came to construct a dichotomy between pure and adulterated foods, The Chemistry of Fear makes a useful and novel contribution to the field of food history, which is seldom presented in the form of biography.
Successfully walking the fine line between biography and academic monograph, Rees has created a vibrant history of Harvey Wiley's life and work that also explains, with academic rigor, the context and importance of this work. Engaging, fast-paced, and very readable. Anyone interested in food policy, safety, and production, as well as scholars of history and the history of science and technology, will enjoy this book.
The Chemistry of Fear offers a clear-eyed view of the famed Harvey Wiley, who helped shape our modern food system. Jonathan Rees persuasively unpacks the legend around Wiley, reconsidering his legacy as the 'Father of Pure Food,' and leaving readers with something more complex, but also more satisfying.
This gracefully-written book offers an engaging assessment of the life and times of food purity crusader Harvey Wiley. Interspersing Dr. Wiley's personal history (and romantic entanglements!) with his principal crusades, Jonathan Rees offers an incisive assessment of Wiley's personality, philosophical outlook—and enduring impact on American food. A great read and the definitive biography of this important man.
Reading the historical record against the grain of popular memory and interpretation, The Chemistry of Fear shines fresh light on the life and work of Harvey Wiley. In so doing, it weaves Wiley's legacy anew into the complex dynamics of purity, naturalness, safety, risk, and fear that shapes today's politics of 'good' food.
Book Details
Introduction. Who Was Harvey Wiley?
Chapter One. Indiana
Chapter Two. Honey
Chapter Three. Sugar Beets
Chapter Four. Adulterated Food
Chapter Five. Meat
Chapter Six. Pure Food
Chapter Seven. Whiskey
Chapter
Introduction. Who Was Harvey Wiley?
Chapter One. Indiana
Chapter Two. Honey
Chapter Three. Sugar Beets
Chapter Four. Adulterated Food
Chapter Five. Meat
Chapter Six. Pure Food
Chapter Seven. Whiskey
Chapter Eight. Enforcement
Chapter Nine. Saccharin and Ketchup
Chapter Ten. Drugs
Chapter Eleven. Bleached Flour and Baking Powder
Chapter Twelve. Coca-Cola
Chapter Thirteen. Resignation
Chapter Fourteen. The Good Housekeeping Years
Conclusion. Wiley's Legacy
Acknowledgments
Notes
Essay on Sources
Index