Fr. 89.00

How Urbanism Changes Foodways

English · Hardback

Will be released 31.12.2025

Description

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The advent of urbanism had profound impacts on landscape management, agricultural production, food preservation, and cuisine. This Element examines the 6,000-year history of urbanism through the archaeological perspective of food, using the analysis of cooking and eating vessels, botanical remains, and animal bones along with texts and iconographic evidence to understand the foodways that spurred and accompanied the growth of cities. Human-environmental changes took place as farmers became fewer in number but increasingly essential as providers of food for city-based consumers. The Element also examines the ways in which cities today share patterns of food production and consumption with the first urban settlements, and that we can address questions of sustainability, nutritional improvement, and other desired outcomes by recognizing how the growth of cities has resulted in distinct constraints and opportunities related to food.

List of contents










1. Introduction: what's different about urban food?; 2. Preference, preservation, and the sociobiology of urban foods; 3. The economics of urban foods; 4. The sociability of urban cuisine; 5. The past, present, and future of urban food; References.

Product details

Authors Smith Monica L.
Publisher Cambridge Academic
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Release 31.12.2025
 
EAN 9781009564885
ISBN 978-1-009-56488-5
Weight 500 g
Illustrations Worked examples or Exercises
Series Elements in the Archaeology of Food
Subjects Social sciences, law, business > Ethnology > Ethnology

Sustainability, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social, National & regional cuisine, Urban communities, Environmental archaeology, Urban communities / city life

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