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28 October, 21:36

Read the excerpt from "Early Victorian Tea Set."

So our tea set is really a three-piece social history of nineteenth-century Britain. It is also a lens through which historians such as Linda Colley can look at a large part of the history of the world:

It does underline how much empire, consciously or not, eventually impacts on everybody in this country. If in the nineteenth century you are sitting at a mahogany table drinking tea with sugar, you are linked to virtually every continent on the globe. You are linked with the Royal Navy, which is guarding the sea routes between these continents, you are linked with this great tentacular capital machinery through which the British control so many parts of the world and ransack them for commodities, including commodities that can be consumed by the ordinary civilian at home.

Which is the best summary of this excerpt?

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  1. 29 October, 01:13
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    The tea set is not an ordinary set for drinking tea; it symbolizes the social history of Great Britain in the 19th century where every inhabitant is affected by trade and industrialization. In short, it speaks of oppression and subjugation of the weaker peoples and increased power and wealth of the capitalist.
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