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Chapter 4 - Tobacco, Consumption, and Imperial Intent

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 January 2020

Lauren Working
Affiliation:
University of Oxford

Summary

James I’s well-known aversion to smoking has long been viewed as a quirk in the king’s already eccentric personality. Eschewing teleological assessments of the inevitability of the rise of smoking in England, particularly its embeddedness in elite civility, this chapter considers authorities’ concerns over disorder and dissent. Aware of the significance of tobacco in Native American societies, the smoke of that ‘pagan’ plant evoked Catholic incense, the Gunpowder Treason, and a rejection of the manners so integral to post-Reformation concepts of order and deference. The chapter then turns to the formative influence of the tobacco debates in Parliament on forcing clearer articulations of colonial oversight in the 1620s. Despite its potential for subversion, pro-imperial MPs endorsed tobacco as a marker of their support for a burgeoning transatlantic polity. By praising tobacco as evidence of industrious Protestant cultivation, gentlemen championed a luxury commodity as a political necessity, even a political good. From the theatre of Parliament to the circulation of print, debates over the merits and appeal of tobacco placed imperial consumption within gentlemanly political culture, one bolstered by colonial intervention and access to overseas trade and intelligence.

Information

Figure 0

Figure 5 Table-observations (1615).

By kind permission of the Society of Antiquaries of London.

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