A History of Vodka | |
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First edition softcover, featuring 19th-century lubok |
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Author(s) | William Pokhlyobkin |
Original title | История водки |
Translator | Renfrey Clarke |
Country | former Soviet Union |
Language | Russian |
Series | Популярная кулинария (Popular Cookery) |
Subject(s) | Priority of vodka production and other Russian alcoholic beverage issues |
Publisher | Inter-Verso |
Publication date | 1991 |
Published in English |
December, 1992 (Verso Books, hardcover) |
Media type | Book |
Pages | 288 (1991 edition) |
ISBN | ISBN 0-86091-359-7 (1992 edition) |
OCLC Number | 28183139 |
Dewey Decimal | 663/.5 20 |
LC Classification | TP607.V6 P6513 1992 |
Preceded by | Urho Kaleva Kekkonen |
Followed by | Foreign Policy of Rus, Russia and the USSR for 1,000 Years in Names, Dates and Facts |
A History of Vodka (Russian: «История водки», Romanized: Istoriya vodki) is an academic monograph by William Pokhlyobkin, which was awarded the Langhe Ceretto Prize. Although the work had been was finished in 1979, it was published just before the dissolution of the Soviet Union. In his book, in particular, Pokhlyobkin wanted the Russian vodka to be legally produced only from the rye stuff.
Contents |
After years of painstaking research Pokhlyobkin concluded that Russia's first grain-based vodka could have been distilled at the premises of the Chudov Monastery in the Moscow Kremlin by a monk called Isidore circa 1430. Apparently, the distillation technology spread to the city of Moscow itself in 1440s. Pokhlyobkin suggests that both prohibition and drunkenness are scourges which encourage one another. He suggests that irresponsible and uncultured ways of consuming vodka make people drunk, not vodka itself.
The later Russian editions include the 2005 softcover issue by Tsentrpoligraf (ISBN 5-9524-1895-3).
Three years after release the book was criticized by David Christian in Slavic Review.[1] He cast doubt on statistics presented in the book. In Christian's opinion, the definitions of such terms as distilling and state monopoly were found so vague that it became hard to know when Pokhlyobkin offered firm dates for their first appearance. The arguments about the first usage of the word "vodka" and its first appearance were marked as convoluted, messy, repetitive, sometimes self-contradictory and unconvincing. Christian also pointed out at anti-capitalist polemics and Stalinist snobberies of the book.
Another case, tackled by criticism, is the way On the Combinations of Water with Alcohol by Dmitriy Mendeleyev was emphasized. It was pointed out that Pokhlyobkin used Mendeleyev's data in a speculative way to ascribe to solution of spirit and water the eminent "biochemical and physiological properties".[2]