Adrian Buck’s Reviews > The Hungry Empire: How Britain’s Quest for Food Shaped the Modern World > Status Update

Adrian Buck
is on page 127 of 384
"It was probably a food processing factory rather than a textile mill that inspired William Blake's phrase 'dark satanic mills' in his poem 'Jerusalem'" - I don't mind, I have connections to both.
— May 26, 2020 07:45AM
Like flag
Adrian’s Previous Updates

Adrian Buck
is on page 271 of 384
"We no longer feel confident that we know the answer to the question of how we should grow and acquire our food." - for other, non imperial reasons
— Jun 16, 2020 07:41AM

Adrian Buck
is on page 271 of 384
"Hitler drew onspiration from the British and American examples"
— Jun 16, 2020 07:39AM

Adrian Buck
is on page 248 of 384
During the war, the hierarchy of priorities that had always operated within the Empire became glaringly obvious. British citizens were prioritized, below them were the white settlers in the dominions, and lastly, and definitely least, came Britain's [non-white] colonial subjects."
— Jun 16, 2020 07:37AM

Adrian Buck
is on page 248 of 384
"While 31,000 Allied infantry died in the North African campaign, around three million Bengalis died from starvation and the effects of malnutrition"
— Jun 16, 2020 07:32AM

Adrian Buck
is on page 248 of 384
The various post-war 'development' failed even to produce food for Britain. More lamentably, the string of development failures did not sufficiently discredit the belief that Africa would be best served if it were transformed into a version of south-eastern England"
— Jun 16, 2020 06:28AM

Adrian Buck
is on page 246 of 384
"The East Africans would have been better off if they had continued to grow millet, sorghum, njahi and plantain, using traditional farming methods." - only one side of this argument is presented, the author elsewhere mentions labour intensity, but issues of scalability and learning curves also come to mind."
— Jun 16, 2020 06:19AM

Adrian Buck
is on page 246 of 384
"The East Africans would have been better off if they had continued to grow millet, sorghum, njahi and plantain, using traditional farming methods." - only one side of this argument is presented, the author elsewhere mentions labour intensity, but issues of scalability and learning curves also come to mind."
— Jun 16, 2020 06:16AM

Adrian Buck
is on page 237 of 384
"Amid the atmosphere of protectionism during the inter-war years, the government worried about its dependency on unpredictable foreign partners..." - why then did they then abandon the Commonwealth for he EEC in the 1970s?
— Jun 13, 2020 05:45AM

Adrian Buck
is on page 237 of 384
"...in the1920s...Sunday high tea...consisted of tinned Canadian salmon...and...canned Australian pears with tinned Carnation milk" - something I enjoyed as a child in the 1970s
— Jun 13, 2020 05:40AM

Adrian Buck
is on page 232 of 384
"By the 1890s, Britain absorbed 60 per cent of the meat that was traded globally" - how responsible was Britain for the development of Chicago's stock yards?
— Jun 13, 2020 05:36AM