Snake Wine and Sea Lanes: Trade, Tradition, the Drinks That Shaped Cultures
Uitgelicht
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10,88 |
Naar shop
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11,50 |
Naar shop
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Beschrijving
Bol
What kind of world produces a drink with a snake inside?For many, snake wine is a curiosity-a spectacle glimpsed behind glass, equal parts fascination and discomfort. But beneath that reaction lies a much deeper story. In Snake Wine and Sea Lanes, Maurice Dudley traces the origins of one of the world's most misunderstood drinks-not as a novelty, but as a product of trade, medicine, and survival. Long before alcohol was associated with leisure, it served as infrastructure. It preserved liquids, carried medicine, and moved reliably across the maritime networks that connected Asia long before modern borders existed. Along these sea lanes, ideas traveled with people-distillers, merchants, healers-shaping traditions that still persist today. At the center of this story is Okinawa, where the practice of snake-infused alcohol evolved into habu-shu, a refined and regulated expression of a shared regional tradition. Through this lens, Dudley explores how cultures adapt, translate, and preserve meaning across centuries of change. Blending historical insight with lived experience, this book examines: - How alcohol functioned as a tool before it became a luxury- Why medicinal infusions-including snake wine-made sense within traditional systems- How maritime trade shaped the spread of spirits across Asia- The role of Okinawa as a cultural and commercial crossroads- How traditions survive by adapting, not remaining pure This is not a defense of snake wine, nor a travelogue built on shock value. It is a cultural history told through drinks-one that invites readers to look beyond first impressions and ask better questions. Because the real question is not: Would you drink this? It is: What made it possible?
What kind of world produces a drink with a snake inside?For many, snake wine is a curiosity-a spectacle glimpsed behind glass, equal parts fascination and discomfort. But beneath that reaction lies a much deeper story. In Snake Wine and Sea Lanes, Maurice Dudley traces the origins of one of the world's most misunderstood drinks-not as a novelty, but as a product of trade, medicine, and survival. Long before alcohol was associated with leisure, it served as infrastructure. It preserved liquids, carried medicine, and moved reliably across the maritime networks that connected Asia long before modern borders existed. Along these sea lanes, ideas traveled with people-distillers, merchants, healers-shaping traditions that still persist today. At the center of this story is Okinawa, where the practice of snake-infused alcohol evolved into habu-shu, a refined and regulated expression of a shared regional tradition. Through this lens, Dudley explores how cultures adapt, translate, and preserve meaning across centuries of change. Blending historical insight with lived experience, this book examines: - How alcohol functioned as a tool before it became a luxury- Why medicinal infusions-including snake wine-made sense within traditional systems- How maritime trade shaped the spread of spirits across Asia- The role of Okinawa as a cultural and commercial crossroads- How traditions survive by adapting, not remaining pure This is not a defense of snake wine, nor a travelogue built on shock value. It is a cultural history told through drinks-one that invites readers to look beyond first impressions and ask better questions. Because the real question is not: Would you drink this? It is: What made it possible?
AmazonPagina's: 75, Paperback, Independently published
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