#coffeeland
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thatwritererinoriordan · 28 days ago
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davidpotash · 1 year ago
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Coffeeland: What's In Your Cup Of Java?
Augustine Sedgewick is an innovative thinker, a scholar with strong research skills and the ability to tell a story with big ideas. An historian who teaches at the City University of New York, Sedgewick’s award-winning book Coffeeland: One Man’s Dark Empire and the Making of Our Favorite Drug is a provocative, complex and fascinating work. It is accessible history, to be sure, and it offers…
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sicariusmeansassassin · 2 years ago
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“In 1554, two Syrians went into business together in their adopted hometown of Constantinople. Schems had come from Damascus, Hekim from Aleppo. Amid the stalls of the busy market district near the Bosporus, they opened a coffee shop, the city’s first.”
Epic First Lines — Coffeeland: One Man’s Dark Empire and the Making of our Favorite Drug by Augustine Sedgewick
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ajtofficial · 2 years ago
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No Coffee ☕️ No Deal 🙅‍♂️ #king of #coffeeland 🔥 Angry Lion Ring @ajtjewellery ™️😈 📸 @luisalfredator #ajtjewellery #gutemala🇬🇹 #worldwide (at Guatemala) https://www.instagram.com/p/CmnrYkJh1bY/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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karnatakatravels · 5 months ago
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Mysore - Chikmagalur - Hampi - Goa Traveling through Mysore, Chikmagalur, Hampi, and Goa provides a multifaceted experience of Karnataka's rich heritage, natural beauty, and historical grandeur. Each destination offers unique attractions and experiences, making this journey a memorable exploration of India's diverse cultural landscape. For reservations, get in touch Contact: +91 9845370515 https://karnatakatravels.com/ #MysorePalace #ChamundiHill #BrindavanGardens #MysoreZoo #StPhilomenasChurch #MysoreDasara #MysoreDiaries #HeritageCity, Chikmagalur #Chikmagalur #CoffeeLand #Mullayanagiri #Kudremukh #HebbeFalls #BabaBudangiri #ChikmagalurDiaries #WesternGhats #NatureLovers #HillStation, Hampi #Hampi #HampiRuins #Vijayanagara #VirupakshaTemple #HampiDiaries #GoaSunset #GoaNightlife #GoaFood #GoaVibes #ExploreGoa
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olivewinterleaf · 10 months ago
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THINGS TO DO (part 2)
Produce a recording in deep space with a deep voice.
Look for a dragon at the edge of a magazine.
Imagine you are a small planet in the orbit of a pink sun. It has a galaxy of hitchhiker’s boots marching around it.
Spot a yellow vase that is close enough to your bedroom window.
Collect a number of doughnuts. Then chronicle their adventures in Coffeeland.
Go down to a nearby forest. After a few trees, your view is green all over.
After a few minutes of listening to music, you notice the shape of it.
Find out if you have recurring dreams about abstract art. Then write a complete guide to high-viz jackets.
Imagine sea monkeys sitting in the shape of a Q.
Imagine you are surrounded by giant multicoloured seahorses in the shape of a Q...
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taintedplains · 1 year ago
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Long time no post!
my classes have started again so i haven't had much time to contribute to this blog. i have something to share with you guys though! i finally compiled all my glasmar maps into a zip file for anyone to download! it also includes coffeeland if anyone remembers that map from impressive world days; it was a fanmade map specifically for custom spawning. i didn't make it, but considering it was given out for free, i thought it'd be nice to include for people who don't have their own private maps. (additionally there are extra copies of royal and disco to fix/update the maps due to clashes with the new ones.)
drop everything into the terrains folder and you should be good to go!
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caffebull · 5 years ago
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principleofplenitude · 5 years ago
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The intricate synergies of coffee and capitalism form the subtext of the historian Augustine Sedgewick’s thoroughly engrossing first book, Coffeeland: One Man’s Dark Empire and the Making of Our Favorite Drug. At the center of Sedgewick’s narrative is James Hill, an Englishman born in the slums of industrial Manchester in 1871 who, at 18, sailed for Central America to make his fortune. There, he built a coffee dynasty by refashioning the Salvadoran countryside in the image of a Manchester factory. Hill became the head of one of the “Fourteen Families” who controlled the economy and politics of El Salvador for much of the 20th century; at the time of his death, in 1951, his 18 plantations employed some 5,000 people and produced more than 2,000 tons of export-ready coffee beans from more than 2,500 acres of rich soil on the slopes of the Santa Ana volcano. For many years, much of what Hill (or rather his workers) produced ended up in the familiar red tins of Hills Brothers coffee.“What does it mean to be connected to faraway people and places through everyday things?” Sedgewick asks in his early pages.  Coffeeland offers a fascinating meditation on that question, by rendering once-obscure lines of connection starkly visible.Filling those cans of Hills Brothers coffee involved a few different forms of brutality. Because growing coffee requires a tremendous amount of labor—for planting, pruning, picking, and processing—a planter’s success depends on finding enough people in the countryside willing to work. The essential question facing any would-be capitalist, as Sedgewick reminds us, has always and ever been “What makes people work?” Chattel slavery had provided a good answer for Brazil’s coffee farmers, but by the time Hill arrived in El Salvador, in 1889, slave labor was no longer an option. A smart and unsentimental businessman, Hill understood that he needed wage labor, lots of it, and as a son of the Manchester slums, he knew that the best answer to the question of what will make a person work was in fact simple: hunger.There was only one problem. Rural Salvadorans, most of whom were Indians called “mozos,” weren’t hungry. Many of them farmed small plots of communally owned land on the volcano, some of the most fertile in the country. This would have to change if El Salvador was to have an export crop. So at the behest of the coffee planters and in the name of “development,” the government launched a program of land privatization, forcing the Indians to either move to more marginal lands or find work on the new coffee plantations. Actually the choice wasn’t initially quite so stark. Even the lands newly planted with coffee still offered plenty of free food for the picking. “Veins of nourishment”—in the form of cashews, guavas, papayas, jocotes, figs, dragon fruits, avocados, mangoes, plantains, tomatoes, and beans—“ran through the coffee monoculture, and wherever there was food, however scant, there was freedom, however fleeting, from work,” Sedgewick writes. The planters’ solution to this “problem”—the problem of nature’s bounty—was to eliminate from the landscape any plant that was not coffee, creating an ever more totalitarian monoculture in which nothing else was permitted to grow. When a chance avocado tree did manage to survive in some overlooked corner, the campesino caught tasting its fruit would be accused of theft and beaten if he was lucky, or shot if he was not. Thus was the concept of private property impressed upon the Indians. In Sedgewick’s words, “What was needed to harness the will of the Salvadoran people to the production of coffee, beyond land privatization, was the plantation’s production of hunger itself.” James Hill did the math and found that workers showed up most promptly and worked most diligently if he paid them partly in cash—15 cents a day for women and double that for men—and partly in food: breakfast and lunch, which consisted of two tortillas topped with as many beans as could be balanced on them. (The local diet became as monotonous as the landscape.) Hill thus transformed thousands of subsistence farmers and foragers into wage laborers, extracting quantities of surplus value that would be the envy of any Manchester factory owner.The whole notion of surplus value of course is Karl Marx’s and, as Sedgewick points out, emerged from Marx and Friedrich Engels’s analysis of industrial capitalism in James Hill’s birthplace. Communism was another Manchester export that found its way to Santa Ana, this one arriving during the Great Depression, when coffee prices collapsed and unemployed coffee workers could no longer eat from the land. It turns out that leftists were also able “to transform hunger into power.” The climax of Sedgewick’s narrative comes in the early 1930s, when thousands of mozos, organized by homegrown Communists who had spent time abroad, rose up against the coffee barons, seizing plantations and occupying town halls.Revolution was afoot, at least until 1932, when the Salvadoran government, again at the behest of the coffee planters, launched a vicious counterinsurgency. Rounding up anyone who looked like an Indian, soldiers herded them into town squares and then opened fire with machine guns. The government’s campaign against the coffee workers came to be known as La Matanza—“The Massacre”—and its memory burns bright in the Salvadoran countryside. When El Salvador erupted for a second time half a century later, the coffee barons were under siege again; James Hill’s grandson, Jaime Hill, was kidnapped by rebels and held for a multimillion-dollar ransom, which the family had no trouble paying.
“Capitalism’s favorite drug” from The Atlantic
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coalcrackercoffee · 5 years ago
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Coffee in the morning...
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Coffee in the morning gets me going.  Especially a dark roast.
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kbraonall · 5 years ago
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Bi'kahve
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youknowthis · 2 years ago
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A VIRTUAL TOUR TO #Chikkamagaluru | #Chikmagalur | The Land of #Coffee | The Breath Taking Beauty
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hofculctr · 3 years ago
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Hofstra University
Coffeeland: One Man’s Dark Empire and the Making of Our Favorite Drug
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Augustine Sedgewick will discuss his book, Coffeeland: One Man’s Dark Empire and the Making of Our Favorite Drug. Coffee is an indispensable part of daily life for billions of people around the world. But few coffee drinkers know this story. It centers on the volcanic highlands of El Salvador, where James Hill, born in the slums of Manchester, England, founded one of the world’s great coffee dynasties at the turn of the twentieth century. Adapting the innovations of the Industrial Revolution to plantation agriculture, Hill helped turn El Salvador into perhaps the most intensive monoculture in modern history—a place of extraordinary productivity, inequality, and violence.
Wednesday, April 13, 2022 2:40-4:05 p.m. Breslin Hall Room 209
Advance registration required. Attendees must be fully vacinated. Evidence of vaccination will be required at time of entry with Hofstra Pride Pass or proof of vaccination and government ID.
Mask-wearing is optional in indoor places on campus. More information and to RSVP visit http://tiny.cc/44iquz
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ajtofficial · 3 years ago
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👑 🦁 👑 King of #Coffeeland beautiful piece of art from Atitlan! #ajt #ajtjewellery #menswear #arnoldschwarzenegger #fashion #skull #skullring #ring #bikerjewelry #harleydavidson #mensfashion #mensjewelry #silverring #skullrings #handmade #mensfashionreview #silver #silverrings #skulljewellery #skulljewelry (at Guatemala) https://www.instagram.com/p/CZcnxd1h7yr/?utm_medium=tumblr
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•| Coffee minis ❤ |•| a little taken for the past |• . . #minipainting #coffeepainting #coffee #aesthetic #art #flatlay #styling #deep #dark #artist #artistofindia #artistcommunity #artistoninstagram #artistsofhyderabad #dream #hope #wonderland #coffeeland . . #treasureitwithjo #30photosinseptember https://www.instagram.com/p/CE_QmwEg5hs/?igshid=73s7s77rerii
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annnguyen · 4 years ago
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"Nhiều người nói Đà Lạt bây giờ đông đúc quá, chốn này ai đến thì đến, ai đi thì đi. Chẳng còn cái gì của riêng nữa. Rốt cuộc thì trên đời có gì là của riêng, ngoài tâm hồn này chứ. Thương hay không, cũng chỉ là một sự lựa chọn. Nơi đây vẫn đủ đầy trong từng ý niệm. Còn gì thì thương nấy. Mà có lẽ, Đà Lạt với mình cũng chỉ là ngồi xuống uống cafe, lên đồi, đi suối, một mình giữa bao la đại ngàn, chưa bao giờ mình thấy phải chia sẻ hay bị chia sẻ. Thành phố này cất cho mình quá nhiều riêng tư." #dalat #beloved #cities #beloveddalat #market #coffeeland #loveindalat #calm #peace #binhyen #tree #greencities #loved #familiar #belovedcity❤️ #heart #love #beautifuldestinations #own #comebackplaces #comeback #vietnam #travelling (at Da Lat) https://www.instagram.com/p/CC3iVHtpBex/?igshid=128kpmceikqn0
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