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Taste or taboo : dietary choices in antiquity / Michael Beer.

By: Beer, MichaelMaterial type: TextTextPublication details: Totnes, Devon : Prospect Books, 2010. Description: 152 p. ; 22 cmISBN: 9781903018637 Other title: Dietary choices in antiquitySubject(s): To 1500 | Food habits -- History -- To 1500 | Food -- Social aspects -- History | Diet, Vegetarian -- history | Alcohol Drinking -- historyGenre/Form: HistoryDDC classification: 394.120901 LOC classification: GT2850 | .B44 2010
Contents:
Diet in the ancient world -- Vegetarianism -- Beans -- Fish -- The dietary laws of the Jews -- Restrictions upon alcohol -- State control of food : Spartan diet and Roman sumptuary laws -- Gluttony versus abstinence : the tyrant and the saint.
Action note: committed to retain 20181001 in perpetuity ReCAP Shared CollectionSummary: "This book explores dietary restriction in Graeco-Roman antiquity and maintains that food choice, whether for reasons of taste or to propitiate religious or cultural taboos, was integrally linked to the formation and perception of cultural, political and religious identities. This is paralleled by the way social and ethnic groups use indigenous cuisines and particular modes of food consumption as social markers to define and negotiate notions of identity, particularly in periods of social transition, migration and cultural integration. Michael Beer looks at all these questions through the literature of the Classical, Hellenistic and Roman periods. He focuses on the first and second centuries AD, a time rich in both cultural interaction and tension, but, owing to the particular cultural and philosophical strands that were current, the material will in fact range from the Homeric texts to Porphyry. These tensions throw into sharp relief the problems of defining the nature and limits of group and individual identity within a sprawling ethnic melting pot. The book examines such phenomena as vegetarianism, the taboos and anxieties surrounding the bean, the ambiguous status of fish, the dietary legislation of the Jews and the restrictions that were placed upon the consumption of alcohol. These particular instances serve as examples of dietary flash points, when differing ideologies act as potent illustrations of the undercurrents of ethnic, racial and cultural tensions in the ancient world."--Back cover.
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Books Books The BIAA David H. French Library
Shelf 36 - Main Room
G1a BEER 27900 Not for loan BOOKS*000000020769

Includes bibliographical references (p. 130-145) and index.

Diet in the ancient world -- Vegetarianism -- Beans -- Fish -- The dietary laws of the Jews -- Restrictions upon alcohol -- State control of food : Spartan diet and Roman sumptuary laws -- Gluttony versus abstinence : the tyrant and the saint.

"This book explores dietary restriction in Graeco-Roman antiquity and maintains that food choice, whether for reasons of taste or to propitiate religious or cultural taboos, was integrally linked to the formation and perception of cultural, political and religious identities. This is paralleled by the way social and ethnic groups use indigenous cuisines and particular modes of food consumption as social markers to define and negotiate notions of identity, particularly in periods of social transition, migration and cultural integration. Michael Beer looks at all these questions through the literature of the Classical, Hellenistic and Roman periods. He focuses on the first and second centuries AD, a time rich in both cultural interaction and tension, but, owing to the particular cultural and philosophical strands that were current, the material will in fact range from the Homeric texts to Porphyry. These tensions throw into sharp relief the problems of defining the nature and limits of group and individual identity within a sprawling ethnic melting pot. The book examines such phenomena as vegetarianism, the taboos and anxieties surrounding the bean, the ambiguous status of fish, the dietary legislation of the Jews and the restrictions that were placed upon the consumption of alcohol. These particular instances serve as examples of dietary flash points, when differing ideologies act as potent illustrations of the undercurrents of ethnic, racial and cultural tensions in the ancient world."--Back cover.

Paperback.

committed to retain 20181001 in perpetuity ReCAP Shared Collection HUL