American Bacon
The History of a Food Phenomenon
Format:Hardback
Publisher:University of Georgia Press
Publishing:15th Apr '26
£36.95
This title is due to be published on 15th April, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

The four-century history of a gastronomic phenomenon in the United States
In American Bacon, Mark A. Johnson asks (and answers) a seemingly simple question: How has bacon overcome centuries of religious prohibition, cultural contempt, and dietary advice to become a twenty-first-century culinary and cultural powerhouse?
In American Bacon, Mark A. Johnson asks (and answers) a seemingly simple question: How has bacon overcome centuries of religious prohibition, cultural contempt, and dietary advice to become a twenty-first-century culinary and cultural powerhouse? Starting in early modern Britain and tracing the story of bacon through the colonial era, Civil War, Progressive Era, modern fad diets, and the emerging craft bacon industry, Johnson provides a new perspective on some familiar American narratives. More than a story of production, marketing, and consumption, Johnson argues, this cultural history connects bacon to race, class, and gender while also illuminating major historical forces, such as migration, warfare, urbanization and suburbanization, reform movements, cultural trends, and globalization. For Johnson, bacon's story from “most dangerous food in the supermarket” to pop culture and gastronomic phenomenon reflects the cultural values of a nation.
American Bacon is a delicious read that serves up many crispy, enjoyable, and surprising bits of culinary history. It's a fascinating look at how changing perceptions transformed this particular preserved meat from a lowly staple item into an enduring food celebrity.
-- Adrian Miller * James Beard Award-winning author *Mark A. Johnson fries up the preeminent cultural history of bacon in America. Covering four hundred years, American Bacon shows how and why bacon’s role and meaning has dramatically transformed from mundane option to impoverished foodstuff, an unhealthy choice to a mania-inducing culinary darling. Wide-ranging, deeply researched, surprising, and satisfying.
-- Emily J. H. Contois * author of Diners, Dudes, and Diets *American Bacon is a fascinating and important book that forcefully demonstrates that taste is contextual and contingent. Johnson reveals that although the meaning and value of bacon changed over time, bacon has always served as a surprising—but accurate—barometer of American values and preoccupations.
-- Jennifer Jensen Wallach * author of How America Eats: A Social History of U.S. Food and CultuISBN: 9780820375403
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
344 pages