Refrigerator The Story of Cool in the Kitchen

Author(s): Helen Peavitt

Interior Design

From a late-night snack to a cold beer, there’s nothing that whets the appetite quite like the suctioning sound of a refrigerator being opened. In the early 1930s fewer than ten percent of US households had a mechanical refrigerator, but today they are nearly universal, the primary means by which we keep our food and drink fresh. Yet, for as ubiquitous as refrigerators are, most of us take them for granted, letting them blend into the background of our kitchens, basements, garages, and all the other places where they seem so perfectly convenient. In this book, Helen Peavitt amplifies the hum of the refrigerator in technological history, showing us just how it became such an essential appliance.
           
Peavitt takes us to the early closets, cabinets, and boxes into which we first started packing ice and the various things we were trying to keep cool. From there she charts the development of mechanical and chemical technologies that have led to modern-day refrigeration on both industrial and domestic scales, showing how these technologies have created a completely new method of preserving and transporting perishable goods, having a profound impact on society from the nineteenth century and on. She explores the ways the marketing of refrigerators have expressed and influenced our notions of domestic life, and she looks at how refrigeration has altered the agriculture and food industries as well as our own appetites.
           
Strikingly illustrated, this book offers an informative and entertaining history of an object that has radically changed—in a little over one hundred years—one of the most important things we do: eat. 
 


Product Information

An important book a masterful study that is both fascinating and entertaining about the everyday appliance that shaped, more than any other, the way we live and eat. --Claudia Roden, author of the The New Book of Middle Eastern Food"

Helen Peavitt is curator of Consumer Technology at the Science Museum, London.

General Fields

  • : 9781780237510
  • : Reaktion Books, Limited
  • : Reaktion Books, Limited
  • : November 2017
  • : 24.10 cmmm X 15.20 cmmm X 2.30 cmmm
  • : United Kingdom
  • : books

Special Fields

  • : Helen Peavitt
  • : Hardback
  • : en
  • : 641.4520284
  • : 208
  • : 100 illustrations, 50 colour illustrations