Abstract

This article traces the uneven development of English cheese-making from its early commercialization to the eventual triumph of the "cheese factory." The narrative shows how contemporary actors initiated and adapted to changes in technology, distribution, consumption, and regulation. It indicates that artisanal practices have both borrowed from and become integrated with industrial logics and strategies, exemplifying a process that Charles F. Sabel and Jonathan Zeitlin termed the "recombinablility and interpenetration" of different forms of economic organization [World of Possibilities: Flexibility and Mass Production in Western Industrialization (Cambridge, U.K., 1997), 2–3]. International comparisons are introduced to clarify the reasons for England's halting and idiosyncratic transition to industrial-scale cheese-making. [End Page 705]

pdf

Share