Throughout time and in every culture, human beings have eaten together. Commensality - eating and drinking at the same table - is a fundamental social activity, which creates and cements relationships. It also sets boundaries, including or excluding people according to a set of criteria defined by the society. Particular scholarly attention has been paid to banquets and feasts, often hosted for religious, ritualistic or political purposes, but few studies have considered everyday commensality. Commensality: From Everyday Food to Feast offers an insight into this social practice in all its forms, from the most basic and mundane meals to the grandest occasions. Bringing together insights from anthropologists, archaeologists and historians, this volume offers a vast historical scope, ranging from the Late Neolithic period (6th millennium BC), through the Middle Ages, to the present day. The sixteen chapters include case studies from across the world, including the USA, Bolivia, China, Southeast Asia, Iran, Turkey, Portugal, Denmark and the UK. Connecting these diverse analyses is an understanding of commensality's role as a social and political tool, integral to the formation of personal and national identities. From first experiences of commensality in the sharing of food between a mother and child, to the inaugural dinner of the American president, this collection of essays celebrates the variety of human life and society.
Megan Tracy is an Associate Professor of Anthropology at James Madison University. My interests in food, culture, and language predate my anthropological career. In the early 1990s, I served as a Peace Corps volunteer— first in Mongolia ...
D'Anna, Maria Biana, and Carolin Jauss. 2015. Cooking in the Fourth Millennium BCE: Investigating the Social via the Material. In Commensality: From Everyday Food to Feast, ed. Susanne Kerner, Cynthia Chou and Morten Warmind, 65–85.
C. Nell, Commensality and sharing in an Andean community in Bolivia, in Commensality: From Everyday Food to Feast, ed. by S. Kerner, C. Chou, M. Warmind, (Bloomsbury, London, 2015) G.A.A. Okansey, The discovery of the Okor forest and ...
Maria Nikolajeva devoted a chapter, “An Excursus on Significant Meals,” in her 2000 book From Mythic to Linear: Time in Children's Literature, to applying the concepts from a variety of theorists from various disciplines (Claude ...
Popular Anthropology Magazine 1:8–10. Tan, Chee- Beng. 2015. “Commensality and the Organization of Social Relations.” In Commensality: From Everyday Food to Feast, edited by S. Kerner, C. Chou, and M. Warmind, 13–29. London: Bloomsbury.
2 (2013), 154–97; Bhakti and Embodiment: Fashioning Divine Bodies and Devotional Bodies in Krṣṇa Bhakti (New York: Routledge, 2015); Karen Pechilis, The Embodiment of Bhakti (New York: Oxford University Press, 1999). 22.
See: Angela Meah, “Eating,” in Peter Jackson, ed., Food Words: Essays in Culinary Culture (Bloomsbury Academic, ... 3–4 (2011): 528–48; C. Chou, S. Kerner, and M. Warmind, eds., Commensality: From Everyday Food to Feast (London: ...
Matt Fitzgerald, Diet Cults: The Surprising Fallacy at the Core of Nutrition Fads and a Guide to Healthy Eating for the Rest of Us (New York: Pegasus, 2014). Marlene Zuk, Paleofantasy: What Evolution Really Tells Us About Sex, Diet, ...
Ancestral Appetites: Food in Prehistory. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge Gremillion, K. J., 2015. Human behavioral ecology and paleoethnobotany. In Marston, J. M., and D'Alpoim Guedes, J., (eds.) ...
The book focuses on three key themes to emerge in interviews with Cagliari food activists: the significance of territorio (or place), the importance of taste, and the role of education.