Page 43 - @ccess 3 Reader´s Book
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beverage and is flanked by the specific vessel of his drink
            tradition. The ceramic teapot sits at the focal point of the
            image, while the coffee and chocolate pots are on the floor
            at the feet of their drinkers. China looks guarded, as though
            keeping his cards (his tea) close to his chest and separated
            from the viewer by a table. The Middle East — Dufour
            identifies coffee with Turkey, Yemen, and Egypt — raises his
            cup to the event. The figure of the Americas appears to be
            walking in armed with an Aztec bow but has left the arrows at
            home. Posed around a small, round table in close proximity,
            the world’s corners look comfortable, as though it is not at all
            odd that they should be enjoying a drink together.


            Of the statements made by this beverage summit of world
            empires, one is that the globe is vast and varied, but all its
            people seek good health and enjoyment; that is, they are
            as similar as coffee, tea, and chocolate. But the presence of
            the dynamic Mexican figure, a culture newly “discovered”
            to Europe about 175 years before, makes an even stronger
            commentary. He looks young and simple in both pose and
            dress, but he shares the hot beverage habit of the older
            Ottoman and the dapper Mandarin. In fact, he drinks out of
            the largest, most ornate cup and looks the most exposed
            to the viewer in body and pose. His presence there and
            desirable serving ware make him the equal of his older
            imperial neighbors, a surprisingly generous suggestion in
            1685. Yet, in his open posture he also extends an invitation
            to come join him for a drink that is not so apparent in
            the allegories of the others. If so, he heralds a time when
            aggressive trade with the Middle East and Asia would be
            brutally complemented by large-scale exploitation of the
            lands of the former Mesoamerican empires. Beckoning to
            the reader to take the chocolate cure makes him uniquely
            vulnerable among this group, an idea borne out by both
            British and French colonial history in the Americas.


                Source: https://goo.gl/w3hMk9


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