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The Menial Art of Cooking
Menial Art of Cooking
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- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Acknowledgments
- Contributors
- Introduction. The Menial Art of Cooking
- 1. Culinary Preferences
- 2. Food Preparation, Social Context, and Ethnicity in a Prehistoric Mesopotamian Colony
- 3. The Habitus of Cooking Practices at Neolithic Çatalhöyük
- 4. Cooking Meat and Bones at Neolithic Çatalhöyük, Turkey
- 5. From Grinding Corn to Dishing Out Money
- 6. Cooking for Fame or Fortune
- 7. Crafting Harappan Cuisine on the Saurashtran Frontier of the Indus Civilization
- 8. Vale Boi
- 9. “Hoe Cake and Pickerel”
- 10. Great Transformations
- Index
Although the archaeology of food has long played an integral role in our understanding of past cultures, the archaeology of cooking is rarely integrated into models of the past. The cooks who spent countless hours cooking and processing food are overlooked and the forgotten players in the daily lives of our ancestors. The Menial Art of Cooking shows how cooking activities provide a window into other aspects of society and, as such, should be taken seriously as an aspect of social, cultural, political, and economic life. This book examines techniques and technologies of food preparation, the spaces where food was cooked, the relationship between cooking and changes in suprahousehold economies, the religious and symbolic aspects of cooking, the relationship between cooking and social identity, and how examining foodways provides insight into social relations of production, distribution, and consumption. Contributors use a wide variety of evidence--including archaeological data; archival research; analysis of ceramics, fauna, botany, glass artifacts, stone tools, murals, and painted ceramics; ethnographic analogy; and the distribution of artifacts across space--to identify evidence of cooking and food processing left by ancient cooks. The Menial Art of Cooking is the first archaeological volume focused on cooking and food preparation in prehistoric and historic settings around the world and will interest archaeologists, social anthropologists, sociologists, and other scholars studying cooking and food preparation or subsistence.
Book Details
Editors
Sarah R. Graff and Enrique Rodríguez Alegría
Categories
Publishers
Publication year : 2012
License: All rights reserved ©
Times read: 0

