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Benjamin Smith Lyman and Cosmopolitan Vegetarianism

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 March 2022

CHRISTINE M. E. GUTH*
Affiliation:
Email: cmeguth@gmail.com.

Abstract

Studies of the development of vegetarianism in the United States between the Civil War and World War I emphasize the distinctly American character the movement assumed during this period. They take a top-down prescriptive perspective that emphasizes celebrated advocates of a meatless diet such as William Metcalfe, Sylvester Graham, Bronson Alcott, and J. H. Kellogg, ignoring the often humdrum reality of this food choice. This article instead examines what it meant to live a vegetarian life from the bottom up, during an era when American foodways were being transformed by growing global interconnectedness resulting from advances in technology, science, transportation, and communications, bound up with American imperialism. It takes as its starting point the voluminous correspondence and other archival material associated with Benjamin Smith Lyman (1835–1920), a lifelong vegetarian and the author of Vegetarian Diet and Dishes (1917), and an eloquent, idiosyncratic, yet overlooked spokesperson for this practice. Lyman was an eminent, widely traveled mining geologist who over the course of a fifty-year career carried out surveys in the United States, Canada, India, the Philippines, and Japan, where he remained from 1873 to 1881. His activities and writings draw attention to the cosmopolitan dimensions of the cultivation, procurement, preparation, and consumption of foodstuffs suitable to a vegetarian diet, many introduced from Asia to the United States through the efforts of governmental agencies and immigrants.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press in association with the British Association for American Studies

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References

1 The key studies on Lyman (hereafter BSL) in English are, in order of publication, Kuwada, Gompei, Biography of Benjamin Lyman (Tokyo: Sanseido, 1937)Google Scholar; Goodman, Roy E., “Benjamin Lyman Smith and the Geological Survey of Japan (1872–1879) Papers, Maps and Charts of the American Philosophical Society in Philadelphia,” Journal of East Asian Libraries, 84, 3 (1988), 14Google Scholar; Fujita, Fumiko, American Pioneers and the Japanese Frontier: American Experts in Nineteenth-Century Japan (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1994)Google Scholar; Vance, Timothy J., “Benjamin Smith Lyman as a Phonetician,” Journal of Japanese Linguistics, 28, 1 (Jan. 2012), 3142CrossRefGoogle Scholar. For a list of publications in Japanese see Hiroshi, Takeuchi, comp., Nichibei seiyojin jiten (Tokyo: Nichigai Associates, 1983), 469–71Google Scholar. Between 1990 and 2010, Fukumi Yasuko, former East Asian librarian at University of Massachusetts, Amherst also published 23 brief articles on him, each under the title “A Lyman Miscellany.” Fukumi Yasuko, “Raiman Zakki [A Lyman Miscellany] (23),” Chishitsu News, 668 (April 2010), 57–70.

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100 See Kodafarms at www.kodafarms.com.