The Cambridge World History of Food (2-Volume Set)

by Kenneth F. Kiple

Other authorsKriemhild Coneè Ornelas (Editor)
Hardcover, 2000

Status

Call number

Reference - Culinary -- KIP

Call number

Reference - Culinary -- KIP

Publication

Cambridge University Press (2000), Edition: 1, Hardcover, 1958 pages

Description

"This outstanding work of scholarship explains what we eat and why we eat it. The multidisciplinary articles discuss both individual foods and topcs such as food fads, famine, and eating disorders."--"Outstanding Reference Sources," American Libraries, May 2001. An undertaking without parallel or precedent, this monumental two-volume work encapsulates much of what is known of the history of food and nutrition. It constitutes a vast and essential chapter in the history of human health and culture. Ranging from the eating habits of our prehistoric ancestors to food-related policy issues we face today, this work covers the full spectrum of foods that have been hunted, gathered, cultivated, and domesticated; their nutritional makeup and uses; and their impact on cultures and demography. It offers a geographical perspective on the history and culture of food and drink and takes up subjects from food fads, prejudices, and taboos to questions of food toxins, additives, labeling, and entitlements. It culminates in a dictionary that identifies and sketches out brief histories of plant foods mentioned in the text - over 1,000 in all - and additionally supplies thousands of common names and synonyms for those foods.… (more)

Subjects

Language

Physical description

1958 p.; 10.87 inches

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