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Social archaeology of food: thinking about eating from prehistory to the present

By: Publication details: Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press, 2017.Description: xviii, 400p.: ill. maps; pbk.: 23cmISBN:
  • 9781316607251
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 394.1200901 HAS
Summary: This book offers a global perspective on the role food has played in shaping human societies, through both individual and collective identities. It integrates ethnographic and archaeological case studies from the European and Near Eastern Neolithic, Han China, ancient Cahokia, Classic Maya, the Inka and many other periods and regions, to ask how the meal in particular has acted as a social agent in the formation of society, economy, culture and identity. Drawing on a range of social theorists, Hastorf provides a theoretical toolkit essential for any archaeologist interested in foodways. Studying the social life of food, this book engages with taste, practice, the meal and the body to discuss power, identity, gender and meaning that creates our world as it created past societies. Uses food as an entry into studies of the past - the interest in the archaeology of food is a rapidly expanding focus in all disciplines and in the public eye, and this book solidly addresses this topic Provides a theoretical exposition of past and present social life using food as the key Includes rich examples from the ethnographic and archaeological record, introducing the reader to essential bodies of social theory through food https://www.cambridge.org/in/universitypress/subjects/archaeology/prehistory/social-archaeology-food-thinking-about-eating-prehistory-present?format=PB
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Item type Current library Collection Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Books Books IIT Gandhinagar General 394.1200901 HAS (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Checked out 15/07/2024 033318

Includes References and Index

This book offers a global perspective on the role food has played in shaping human societies, through both individual and collective identities. It integrates ethnographic and archaeological case studies from the European and Near Eastern Neolithic, Han China, ancient Cahokia, Classic Maya, the Inka and many other periods and regions, to ask how the meal in particular has acted as a social agent in the formation of society, economy, culture and identity. Drawing on a range of social theorists, Hastorf provides a theoretical toolkit essential for any archaeologist interested in foodways. Studying the social life of food, this book engages with taste, practice, the meal and the body to discuss power, identity, gender and meaning that creates our world as it created past societies.

Uses food as an entry into studies of the past - the interest in the archaeology of food is a rapidly expanding focus in all disciplines and in the public eye, and this book solidly addresses this topic
Provides a theoretical exposition of past and present social life using food as the key
Includes rich examples from the ethnographic and archaeological record, introducing the reader to essential bodies of social theory through food

https://www.cambridge.org/in/universitypress/subjects/archaeology/prehistory/social-archaeology-food-thinking-about-eating-prehistory-present?format=PB

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