Book contents
- Civilisation Recast
- Civilisation Recast
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Civilisation: A Critical and Constructive Review
- Chapter 2 Civilisation in This Book
- Chapter 3 Long-Term Traditions of Food, Substance, and Sacrifice: Interpreting Cultures of Ingestion in West, South, and East Asia
- Chapter 4 Neolithicities: From Africa to Eurasia and Beyond
- Chapter 5 Ancestors, Civilisation, and Hierarchy: Some Comparisons from Africa
- Chapter 6 Civilisation in China
- Chapter 7 Civilisation and the Government of ‘Civilisation’ in Contemporary China
- Conclusion
- References
- Index
Chapter 3 - Long-Term Traditions of Food, Substance, and Sacrifice: Interpreting Cultures of Ingestion in West, South, and East Asia
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 July 2019
- Civilisation Recast
- Civilisation Recast
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Civilisation: A Critical and Constructive Review
- Chapter 2 Civilisation in This Book
- Chapter 3 Long-Term Traditions of Food, Substance, and Sacrifice: Interpreting Cultures of Ingestion in West, South, and East Asia
- Chapter 4 Neolithicities: From Africa to Eurasia and Beyond
- Chapter 5 Ancestors, Civilisation, and Hierarchy: Some Comparisons from Africa
- Chapter 6 Civilisation in China
- Chapter 7 Civilisation and the Government of ‘Civilisation’ in Contemporary China
- Conclusion
- References
- Index
Summary
In most societies commensality, the sharing of food, is a way of establishing closeness and refusal to do so is usually seen as a sign of distance or enmity (Bloch 2005: 45), but traditions of what particular foods mean, and how they should be prepared for particular events, differ greatly. Social anthropology and archaeology have long explored food in the ethnographic present or the distant past, but with rather different emphases.
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- Civilisation RecastTheoretical and Historical Perspectives, pp. 47 - 74Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2019