The bloodless revolution : a cultural history of vegetarianism from 1600 to modern times
"A grand history made up of interlocking biographies of extraordinary figures from the English Civil War to the era of Romanticism and beyond. The Bloodless Revolution is filled with stories of spectacular adventure in India and subversive scientific and moral controversies carved out at the dawn of the modern age." "When seventeenth-century European travelers returned from India, they triggered a crisis in the conscience of the Western world by telling stories of a meatless society fueled entirely by vegetables, milk, and fruit. Dissenting from the entrenched custom of eating meat. Thomas Tryon established a quasi-Hindu society in London, and his extraordinary books later converted Benjamin Franklin to vegetarianism."--Jacket
Print Book, English, 2007
1st American ed View all formats and editions
W.W. Norton & Co., New York, 2007
History
xxvi, 628 pages, 24 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color), portraits ; 25 cm
9780393052206, 0393052206
71509072
Previous ed. has subtitle: Radical vegetarians and the discovery of India