Social Dimensions of Food in the Prehistoric Balkans. Collected papers
Category: Prehistory; Food studies
Ever since the definition of the Neolithic Revolution by V. Gordon Childe, archaeologists have been aware of the crucial importance of food for the understanding of prehistoric developments. Numerous studies have classified and described cooking ware, hearths and ovens, have studied food residues and more recently also stable isotopes in skeletal material. However, we have not yet succeeded in integrating traditional, functional perspectives on nutrition and semiotic approaches (e.g. dietary practices as an identity marker) with current research in the fields of Food Studies and Material Culture Studies. This volume brings together leading specialists in archaeobotany, economic zooarchaeology and palaeoanthropology to discuss practices of food production and consumption in their social dimensions from the Mesolithic to the Early Iron Age in the Balkans, a region with intermediary position between and the Aegean Sea on one side and Central Europe and the Eurasian steppe regions on the other side. The prehistoric inhabitants of the Balkans were repeatedly confronted with foreign knowledge and practices of food production and consumption which they integrated and thereby transformed into their life. In a series of transdisciplinary studies, the contributors shed new light on the various social dimensions of food in a synchronous as well as diachronic perspective. Contributors present a series of case studies focused on themes of social interaction, communal food preparation and consumption, the role of feasting, and the importance and management of salt production.
Table of contents
Introduction. Social dimensions of food
1. “Herd” mentality
2. Neolithic taboos in Anatolia and southeast Europe
3. Eating out: Food and social context in the Early Neolithic of Greece
4. Breath of change: Food and pottery in the course of the Neolithic in northern Greece
5. Carcasses, ceramics and cooking at Makriyalos I: Towards an integrated approach to human diet and commensality in Late Neolithic northern Greece
6. Painted pottery and culinary practices: Use-alteration analysis of painted pottery from the site of Starčevo-Grad
7. Feasting during the Early Neolithic of the central Balkans: The fauna from Blagotin, Serbia
8. Of pits and bones: A ritual pit at the late Neolithic site of Sarnevo in Bulgarian Thrace
9. Foraging and food production strategies during the Early Neolithic in the Balkans-Carpathian area: The site of Bucova Pusta in Romanian Banat
10. “No quern, no food”? Milling technology and the spread of farming in southeast Europe
11. Prehistoric agricultural toolkits in diachronic perspective: A case study from Bulgaria
12. Social dimensions of salt in the later prehistory of the Eastern Balkans
13. Salt in European prehistory: Social and economic considerations
14. Plant-based food at Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age Drama, southeast Bulgaria: Continuity and innovations
15. Food, status, and power: Animal production and consumption practices during the Carpathian Basin Bronze Age
16. Plant food from the Late Bronze and Early Iron Age hilltop site Kush Kaya, Eastern Rhodope Mountains, Bulgaria: Insights on the cooking practices
17. Food supply and disposal of food remains at Late Bronze and Early Iron Age Ada Tepe: Bioarchaeological aspects of food production, processing and consumption
18. Hunting together: Social aspects of hunting at a 13th—12th century BC fortified site in southwestern Bulgaria
19. Where Angel feared not to tread: Anthropometric approaches to food studies in Aegean and Balkan prehistory
Details | |
Publisher | Oxbow |
Language | English |
Pages | 386 |
Illustrations | b/w and color figures |
Binding | hardback |
ISBN | 978-1-78925-080-0 |
Creation date | 2018 |
Size | 16 х 24 cm |