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Brewing Trouble: How to Drink Beer and Save the World

By Benjamin Dangl, AlterNet. Posted April 1, 2008.


Can corporate "globeerization" be fought through "beeroregionalism"?

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Fermenting Revolution: How to Drink Beer and Save the World By Christopher O'Brien, New Society Publishers (November 2006), 275 pages

Beer, like so many other products, is largely in the hands of giant corporations. Therefore, drinking beer can often enrich the same systems of power we as activists are fighting against. Fermenting Revolution: How To Drink Beer and Save the World by Christopher O'Brien is a book about how the people can take back the brew and join together in saying, "If I can't drink good beer, it's not my revolution."

It is satisfying and rebellious in this increasingly corporate world to make your own beer. In Vermont, homebrewing and microbrewing is a state-wide past time; a 2005 census shows that there is one microbrewery for every 32,792 people in the state, which is the highest number of microbreweries per capita in the country. As many people know, beer drinkers can be activists in how they choose and make their own beer. Interested in changing the world through drinking?Fermenting Revolution can serve as a kind of bible for the beer activist that's bubbling inside each and every one of us.

In Fermenting Revolution, O'Brien presents a people's history of beer, allowing the reader to feel connected to beer activists centuries ago. The author explains the scientific process of brewing in an easy to understand style, avoiding what he calls "Beer geek-speak." The book goes into the important role women have historically played in beer making, and how people can take on corporate globalization by making and drinking their own beer. It's time to get to the home fires brewing!

A People's History of Beer

O'Brien starts his book out by taking us through the long and intoxicating history of beer. It is in Mesopotamia, modern day Iraq, where first emerged the trade of beer and barley. The need to cultivate crops for this important product may have been the initial reason for the settlement of the world's first human civilization. In Babylonia, where beer was safer to drink than the canal water, barley and beer were used as a form of currency. O'Brien argues that the foundations of modern society are built on, well, beer. Beer has also played a central role in the world's major religions. The author suggests that a down-to-earth Jesus who "made a point of associating with ordinary folk" would probably have preferred the common beverage of beer, rather than expensive and elitist wine. "I rather like the image of Jesus as a long-haired, beer-drinking rebel, welcome to crash any party so long as he was willing to conjure up a bottomless supply of beer. Rock on, Rock of Ages!" O'Brien writes that the typical image of Buddha with a round belly suggests the spiritual figure may have been a regular consumer of beer. After all, the Buddha "encouraged abstention from intoxicating drink and drugs" but didn't totally discourage consumption. And none other than Saint Nicholas (Santa Claus) is listed by the Catholic Church as a Patron Saint of Brewing. With stories like this linking beer to religion, O'Brien argues that "sbeerituality" needs to be put back into our drinking culture in the US.

One manifestation of beer's role in modern spirituality is the local bar. The author writes that the bar can act "as a bridge between the sacred and secular domains." O'Brien says that in bars in Asia, it's often common to see a nearby altar with alcohol as an offering. Similarly, worshipping ancestors is often common at bars in the US: "It's the picture of "Old Joe" hanging behind the bar. "Joe" built the place in nineteen-hundred-and-something-or-other, and now after his death, he offers his blessings or his disapproval to what goes on in his sacred beer-drinking place."

A recurring theme in Fermenting Revolution is the role women have played in brewing and beer culture throughout history. Some of the earliest signs of beer show that women were primarily the brewers, and later the tavern owners, that supplied beer. This meant women historically played an important role in society through their control of the beer industry. For example, O'Brien tells us that Viking women in Norse society at the end of the first millennium were the only ones allowed to brew beer. According to law, brewing equipment could only be used by women.

As time went on, however, women around the world were pushed out of brewing by men who felt threatened by the power wielded by women brewers. O'Brien calls himself a "femaleist": he believes that beer brewing has empowered women in the past, and has the potential to do so now. "More women brewing and drinking beer would help correct some of our socially constructed gender imbalances." He laments the fact that today the beer industry is dominated by machismo: "Women of the world, greedy men have stolen your beer and its time to take it back." However, one hopeful example O'Brien points to is Ethiopia, where the homebrewing industry is still strong and is largely controlled by women.


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Benjamin Dangl is a member of the Burlington, VT Homebrewer's Co-op. He is the author of The Price of Fire: Resource Wars and Social Movements in Bolivia (AK Press, 2007) and edits the VT-based international news website, TowardFreedom.com. This review was originally published in Vermont Commons.

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Man, I love beer...
Posted by: ABetterFuture on Apr 1, 2008 1:14 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...but it is (at most) a 4-times/month thing.

I can't afford to drink enough beer to help your special interest, regardless of how much I'd honestly like to. :)

Keep it flowing though. North Carolina brew is the best I've had in ages, and it's almost as good as New Orleans lager, only lacking due to sentiment, I suspect.

Pay your people well, and wish you many just returns.

Here's to you,

--ABF

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Where Do I Sign Up?
Posted by: InsertNameHere on Apr 1, 2008 1:55 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I can drink beer! Finally, a cause I can get behind! I've already had two! Beats getting tasered.

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Make your own beer.....its easy
Posted by: Smiggsy on Apr 1, 2008 2:06 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is as simple to do as baking a cake. The equipment required is not expensive & the rewards are fantastic particularly if you are a beer lover. I can make my own beer from beer kits for a little as 60cents a litre, a low as 20c/l if you make it from scratch. I know what goes into my beer & its preservative free. The beer kits (like boxed cake mixes)which I buy are locally made & not corporate owned although recently I've noticed one multi-national has started producing homebrew kits. I have a draft beer set-up with taps, refrigeration, CO2 & my own kegs but i still prefer to bottle it for better storage & fermentation. When I recently moved house I had so much stored I gave away some 60 bottles to happy friends rather than haul it to the next house.

Mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm.......beer

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Now this is a topic I am exceedingly happy with
Posted by: Shenonymous on Apr 1, 2008 4:06 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ah, beer, yes, nectar for the goddesses!

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We do that here in Richmond, VA
Posted by: jnelson4765 on Apr 1, 2008 4:08 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We've had a vibrant local microbrew industry for years - as part of our fanaticism with good food and relentless boosterism of the local economy. Microbrews are the perfect example of what the new economy needs to be - locally owned, locally operated, and potentially providing markets for local produce.

As a big fan of good beer, the microbrew revolution makes me a very happy man.

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» RE: How about Posted by: bitsfick
Expensive and elitist?
Posted by: dbroneer on Apr 1, 2008 4:28 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Where did the author get the idea that wine would have been "expensive and elitist" in ancient Mesopotamia? Or in ancient Greece, or in modern Europe for that matter?
The two beverages must have been about equal in price, each requiring the growing of a crop and some further processing. The author shouldn't transfer his modern-day observations regarding wine to ancient days. The culture of cheap wine was even still going strong up to the 60s and 70s in France, where I live, for instance.

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no
Posted by: johnshark on Apr 1, 2008 5:03 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
it can't. sorry

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» it can't what? Posted by: war_on_tara
absurd
Posted by: socialpsych on Apr 1, 2008 5:26 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Wherever beer comes from, there is nothing environmentally friendly about people poisoning their bodies.

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» I'll tell you what is absurd Posted by: Illiteratilumen
» RE: You know what? Posted by: Techubus
Wait a minute. . .
Posted by: Prairie Waif on Apr 1, 2008 5:29 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is April Fools' Day. . .


It's too early for me to google. . .

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Personally, I don't think
Posted by: bitsfick on Apr 1, 2008 5:39 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
alcohol is the answer to anything. That said, the author makes a good point about reuse, and recycle. Another good point is produce locally, a tomato grown in California shipped to New York will cost a lot more than a tomato grown and consumed in New York. I think that we are approaching the point where we can no longer afford to use our resources for something we don't need to survive. In other words do I use that grain to make bread and feed my children, or beer which feeds nobody.

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» RE: Personally, I don't think Posted by: Techubus
» RE: Personally, I don't think Posted by: willymack
beer and settling down
Posted by: e rice on Apr 1, 2008 6:08 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
it was at least a decade agog that i first read the theory that brewing might be the reason nomadic people settled down and built cities--just one major problem with it: how could they have brewed beer on the move? first settlements, then brewing.

that said, self-reliance in any aspect of our lives can only be a good thing. support your local handweaver, sew your own clothes.

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MY FAVORITE TOPIC
Posted by: thebeerdoctor on Apr 1, 2008 7:10 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Beer,one of human civilization's greatest inventions will always be with us. The idea of corporate control is rather old hat now, especially when you consider that back in the early 1970's, as Garrett Oliver has pointed out, the American brewing industry nearly destroyed beer, reducing it to pale colored flavorless liquid. But it is from the home brewers that beer was rescued from this fate. It should also be remembered that it was not until the Carter Administration that brewing your own became legal again. As the saying goes: brew beer,not bombs.

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How to drink beer and save the world
Posted by: willymack on Apr 1, 2008 10:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Couldn't be easier. Get on the 'net, beer in hand and commence blathering. I make my own beer and NEVER drink the goat piss Joe Sixpack is so fond of.

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» Me too! Posted by: WhuThe?!?
Go VT
Posted by: estelevistaban on Apr 1, 2008 7:59 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
although I live in CA now, I grew up in Vermont. Sometimes my home state makes me so proud. Nothing like apple cider straight from the mill, fresh milk straight from the cow, syrup (almost) straight from the tree and beer right out of your neighbor's basement. Go VT go -- why buy it if you can make it? And ever since the demise of the small breweries which used to dot the country, corporate beer tastes like (excessive profanity).

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