Exploring the Materiality of Food 'Stuffs': Transformations, Symbolic Consumption and Embodiments / Edition 1

Exploring the Materiality of Food 'Stuffs': Transformations, Symbolic Consumption and Embodiments / Edition 1

ISBN-10:
1138941190
ISBN-13:
9781138941199
Pub. Date:
11/24/2016
Publisher:
Taylor & Francis
ISBN-10:
1138941190
ISBN-13:
9781138941199
Pub. Date:
11/24/2016
Publisher:
Taylor & Francis
Exploring the Materiality of Food 'Stuffs': Transformations, Symbolic Consumption and Embodiments / Edition 1

Exploring the Materiality of Food 'Stuffs': Transformations, Symbolic Consumption and Embodiments / Edition 1

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Overview

From remote antiquity to contemporary contexts, food and the ‘stuff’ of food remains central to people’s daily experiences as well as their sense and expression of identity. This volume explores the materiality of foodstuffs past and present, examining humanity’s intriguingly complex relationships with, and experiences of, food. The book also makes a fresh contribution to our understanding of materiality through a novel focus on material culture, analysing objects used to prepare, wrap, serve and consume food and the tactile experiences involved in its production and consumption. Considering a wide range of cultures, spanning from ancient China to modern-day Kenya, this broad collection of interdisciplinary chapters reveal the multiple interplays between foods, bodies, material worlds, rituals and embodied knowledge that emerge from these encounters and which, in turn, shape the material culture of food. Exploring the Materiality of Food 'Stuffs' makes an important contribution to this burgeoning field and will be of interest to archaeologists and anthropologists working in the key area of food research.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781138941199
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 11/24/2016
Series: Routledge Studies in Archaeology
Pages: 308
Product dimensions: 6.12(w) x 9.19(h) x (d)

About the Author

Louise Steel is Reader in Mediterranean Archaeology at the University of Wales, Trinity Saint David.

Katharina Zinn is Senior Lecturer for Egyptian Archaeology and Heritage at the University of Wales, Trinity Saint David.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction: exploring the materiality of food ‘stuffs’: transformations, embodiment and ritualized consumption
LOUISE STEEL AND KATHARINA ZINN

PART ONE: TRANSFORMATIONS
2. From raw resources to food processing: archaeobotanical and ethnographic insights from New Kingdom Amara West and present-day Ernetta Island in Northern Sudan
PHILIPPA RYAN
3. The domestication of innovation: advertizing strategies for canned foods in the Netherlands, 1945-1985
JON VERRIET
4. Our ‘daily bread’: the origins of grinding grain and breadmaking
BRIAN HAYDEN, LAURIE NIXON-DARCUS AND LOGAN ANSELL
5. Bodies of water: exploring water flows in rural Kenya
LUCI ATTALA

PART TWO: EMBODIED ENCOUNTERS
6. Embodied spirituality and self-divinization: A re-reading of the Legend of Princess Miaoshan
THOMAS JANSEN
7. Permaculture: discovering nature, designing ecologies
ELAINE FORDE
8. The logistics of bread production in Old Kingdom Egypt: A nutritional perspective
CLAIRE MALLESON
9. ‘Everyday’ foodways and social connections in Pompeian houses
PENELOPE ALLISON

PART THREE: SYMBOLIC CONSUMPTION
10. Sumptuous feasting in the ancient Near East: exploring the materiality of the Royal Tombs of Ur
LOUISE STEEL
11. Lacklustre offering plates? Symbolic food consumption, ritual, and representations in ancient Egyptian funerary culture
KATHARINA ZINN
12. The materiality of ecstatic ritual: altered states of consciousness and ritual in Late Bronze Age Cyprus
DAVID COLLARD
13. Ritual and daily life in the Chinese Bronze Age: foodstuffs and bodies in depositional context at Yanshi Shangcheng
KATRINKA REINHART

14. The ambiguous (but important) materiality of food.
RICHARD WILK

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