Visualizing Taste: How Business Changed the Look of What You Eat

Visualizing Taste: How Business Changed the Look of What You Eat

by Ai Hisano
Visualizing Taste: How Business Changed the Look of What You Eat

Visualizing Taste: How Business Changed the Look of What You Eat

by Ai Hisano

eBook

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Overview

Ai Hisano exposes how corporations, the American government, and consumers shaped the colors of what we eat and even the colors of what we consider “natural,” “fresh,” and “wholesome.”

The yellow of margarine, the red of meat, the bright orange of “natural” oranges—we live in the modern world of the senses created by business. Ai Hisano reveals how the food industry capitalized on color, and how the creation of a new visual vocabulary has shaped what we think of the food we eat. Constructing standards for the colors of food and the meanings we associate with them—wholesome, fresh, uniform—has been a business practice since the late nineteenth century, though one invisible to consumers. Under the growing influences of corporate profit and consumer expectations, firms have sought to control our sensory experiences ever since.

Visualizing Taste explores how our perceptions of what food should look like have changed over the course of more than a century. By examining the development of color-controlling technology, government regulation, and consumer expectations, Hisano demonstrates that scientists, farmers, food processors, dye manufacturers, government officials, and intermediate suppliers have created a version of “natural” that is, in fact, highly engineered. Retailers and marketers have used scientific data about color to stimulate and influence consumers’—and especially female consumers’—sensory desires, triggering our appetites and cravings. Grasping this pivotal transformation in how we see, and how we consume, is critical to understanding the business of food.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674242593
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 11/19/2019
Series: Harvard studies in business history ; , #53
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 320
File size: 25 MB
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About the Author

Ai Hisano is Senior Lecturer at the Graduate School of Economics at Kyoto University, Japan. Winner of the Wilbur Owen Sypherd Prize, Hisano has been Newcomen Postdoctoral Fellow in Business History at Harvard Business School. She has published on the food-coloring business, the development of transparent packaging, and gender politics and food marketing.

Table of Contents

Cover Title Page Copyright Contents List of Plates and Figures��������������������������������� 1. Capitalism of the Senses���������������������������������� 2. Food and Modern Visual Culture���������������������������������������� 3. The Color of Dye�������������������������� 4. From Natural Dyes to Cake Mixes����������������������������������������� 5. Making Oranges Orange������������������������������� 6. Fake Food������������������� 7. The Visuality of Freshness������������������������������������ Color Plates 8. Reimagining the Natural��������������������������������� 9. Eye Appeal Is Buy Appeal���������������������������������� Abbreviations�������������������� Notes������������ Acknowledgments���������������������� Index������������
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