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Food: A Culinary History

Edited by Jean-Louis Flandrin and Massimo Montanari

September, 1999
Cloth, 624 pages,
ISBN: 978-0-231-11154-6
$50.50 / £29.50

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Introduction to the Original Edition

One: Prehistory and Early Civilizations

Introduction: The Humanization of Eating Behaviors, by Jean-Louis Flandrin

1. Feeding Strategies in Prehistoric Times, by Catherine Perles

2. The Social Function of Banquets in the Earliest Civilizations, by Francis Joannes

3. Food Culture in Ancient Egypt, by Edda Bresciani

4. Biblical Reasons: The Dietary Rules of the Ancient Hebrews, by Jean Soler

5. The Phoenicians and the Carthaginians: The Early Mediterranean Diet, by Antonella Spano Giammellaro

Two: The Classical World

Introduction: Food Systems and Models of Civilization, by Massimo Montanari

6. Urban and Rural Diets in Greece, by Marie-Claire Amouretti

7. Greek Meals: A Civic Ritual, by Pauline Schmitt-Pantel

8. The Culture of the Symposium, by Massimo Vetta

9. The Diet of the Etruscans, by Giuseppe Sassatelli

10. The Grammar of Roman Dining, by Florence Dupont

11. The Broad Bean and the Moray: Social Hierarchies and Food in Rome, by Mireille Corbier

12. Diet and Medicine in the Ancient World, by Innocenzo Mazzini

13. The Food of Others, by Oddone Longo

Three: From the Late Classical Period to the Early Middle Ages (Fifth--Tenth Centuries)

Introduction: Romans, Barbarians, Christians--The Dawn of European Food Culture, by Massimo Montanari

14. Production Structures and Food Systems in the Early Middle Ages, by Massimo Montanari

15. Peasants, Warriors, Priests: Images of Society and Styles of Diet, by Massimo Montanari

Four: Westerners and Others

Introduction: Food Models and Cultural Identity, by Massimo Montanari

16. Christians of the East: Rules and Realities of the Byzantine Diet, by Ewald Kislinger

17. Arab Cooking and Its Contribution to European Culture, by Bernard Rosenberger

18. Mediterranean Jewish Diet and Traditions in the Middle Ages, by Miguel-Angel Motis Dolader

Five: The Late Middle Ages (Eleventh--Fourteenth Centuries)

Introduction: Toward a New Dietary Balance, by Massimo Montanari

19. Society, Food, and Feudalism, by Antoni Riera-Melis

20. Self-Sufficiency and the Market: Rural and Urban Diet in the Middle Ages, by Alfio Cortonesi

21. Food Trades, by Francoise Desportes

22. The Origins of Public Hostelries in Europe, by Hans Conrad Peyer

23. Medieval Cooking, by Bruno Laurioux

24. Food and Social Classes in Late Medieval and Renaissance Italy, by Allen J. Grieco

25. Seasoning, Cooking, and Dietetics in the Late Middle Ages, by Jean-Louis Flandrin

26. "Mind Your Manners": Etiquette at the Table, by Daniela Romagnoli

27. From Hearth to Table: Late Medieval Cooking Equipment, by Francoise Piponnier

Six: The Europe of Nation-States (Fifteenth--Eighteenth Centuries)

Introduction: The Early Modern Period, by Jean-Louis Flandrin

28. Growing without Knowing Why: Production, Demographics, and Diet, by Michel Morineau

29. Colonial Beverages and the Consumption of Sugar, by Alain Huetz de Lemps

30. Printing the Kitchen: French Cookbooks, 1480--1800, by Philip Hyman and Mary Hyman

31. Dietary Choices and Culinary Technique, 1500--1800, by Jean-Louis Flandrin

32. From Dietetics to Gastronomy: The Liberation of the Gourmet, by Jean-Louis Flandrin

Seven: The Contemporary Period (Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries)

Introduction: From Industrial Revolution to Industrial Food, by Jean-Louis Flandrin

33. The Transformation of the European Diet, by Hans Jurgen Teuteberg and Jean-Louis Flandrin

34. The Invasion of Foreign Foods, by Yves Pehaut

35. The Rise of the Restaurant, by Jean-Robert Pitte

36. The Food Industry and New Preservation Techniques, by Giorgio Pedrocco

37. The Taste for Canned and Preserved Food, by Alberto Capatti

38. The Emergence of Regional Cuisines, by Julia Csergo

39. The Perils of Abundance: Food, Health, and Morality in American History, by Harry A. Levenstein

40. The "McDonaldization" of Culture, by Claude Fischler

Conclusion: Today and Tomorrow, by Jean-Louis Flandrin and Massimo Montanari

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About the Author

Jean-Louis Flandrin is Professor Emeritus at the University of Paris VIII-Vincennes, Directeur d'Etudes at the Ecole des hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales and founder of the international review Food and Foodways. Massimo Montanari is Professor at the University of Bologna, specializing in food of the Middles Ages. Albert Sonnenfeld is Chevalier Professor of French and Comparative Literatures at the University of Southern California and is a longtime member of the National Board of Directors of the American Institute of Wine and Food. He is a restaurant consultant, culinary lecturer, and frequent contributor on culinary topics to the press.

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