Near a Thousand Tables (48 page)

Read Near a Thousand Tables Online

Authors: Felipe Fernandez-Armesto

BOOK: Near a Thousand Tables
13.68Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

85
experimentation with plants:
C. O. Sauer,
Agricultural Origin and Dispersals
(New York, 1952).

85
and grazing herds:
R. J. Braidwood and B. Howe, eds.,
Prehistoric Investigations in Iraqi Kurdistan
(Chicago, 1960).

85
food sources were few:
K. Flannery, “The Origins of Agriculture,”
Annual Reviews in Anthropology,
ii (1973), 271-310.

85
“human communities”:
E. S. Anderson,
Plants, Man and Life
(London, 1954), pp. 142-50.

85
where people lived:
C. B. Heiser,
Seed to Civilization: The Story of Food
(Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1990), pp. 14-26.

85
existing foodstuffs:
Binford and Binford, eds.,
New Perspectives in Archaeology; M. Cohen, The Food Crisis in Prehistory
(New Haven, 1977).

85
as a cause:
B. Bronson, “The Earliest Farming: Demography As Cause and Consequence,” in S. Polgar, ed.,
Population, Ecology and Social Evolution
(The Hague, 1975).

86
supplies are secure:
B. Hayden, “Nimrods, Piscators, Pluckers and Planters: The Emergence of Food Production,”
Journal of Anthropological Research,
ix (1953), 31-69.

86
kind of conviviality:
B. Hayden, “Pathways to Power: Principles for Creating Socioeconomic Inequalities,” in T. D. Price and G. M. Feinman, eds.,
Foundations of Social Inequality
(New York, 1995), pp. 15-86.

86
religious response:
Harlan,
Crops and Man,
pp. 35-36.

87
to tell apart:
S. J. Fiedel,
Prehistory of the Americas
(New York, 1987), p. 162.

87
varieties of beans:
G. P. Nabhan,
The Desert Smells Like Rain: A Naturalist in Papago Indian Country
(San Francisco, 1982);
Enduring Seeds: Native American Agriculture and Wild Plant Conservation
(San Francisco, 1989).

87
“when planted”:
B. Fagan,
The Journey from Eden: The Peopling of Our World
(London, 1990), p. 225.

87
without husking:
D. Rindos,
The Origins of Agriculture: An Evolutionary Perspective
(New York, 1984).

88
loss of the main crop:
K. F. Kiple and K. C. Ornelas, eds.,
The Cambridge World History of Food,
2 vols. (Cambridge, 2000), i, 149.

89
“supply trains”:
C. I. Beckwith,
The Tibetan Empire in Central Asia: A History of the Struggle for Great Power Among Tibetans, Turks, Arabs and Chinese During the Early Middle Ages
(Princeton, 1987), p. 100.

90
“be abundant”:
A. Waley,
The Book of Songs Translated from the Chinese
(London, 1937), p. 17.

90
trees and scrub:
D. N. Keightley, ed.,
The Origins of Chinese Civilization
(Berkeley, 1983), p. 27.

90
occasional rhinoceros:
K. C. Chang,
Shang Civilization
(New Haven, 1980), pp. 138-41.

91
ground in Shansi:
Waley,
Book of Songs,
p. 24.

91
“pink-sprouted and white”:
Ibid., p. 242.

91
over the ruins:
K. C. Chang,
Shang Civilization
(New Haven, 1980).

91
indigenous to China:
Te-Tzu Chang: “The Origins and Early Culture of the Cereal Grains and Food Legumes,” in Keightley, ed.,
Origins of Chinese Civilization,
pp. 66-68.

92
carried home:
W. Fogg, “Swidden Cultivation of Foxtail Millet by Taiwan Aborigines: A Cultural Analogue of the Domestica of Serica Italica in China,” in Keightley,
Origins of Chinese Civilization,
pp. 95-115.

92
the millet stocks:
Waley,
Book of Songs,
pp. 164-67.

92
the mountains in 664:
K. C. Chang, “Origins and Early Culture,” p. 81.

92
monitored and destroyed:
K. C. Chang,
Shang Civilization,
pp. 148-49. The paragraphs on millet in China are derived from F. Fernández-Armesto,
Civilizations
(London, 2000), pp. 251-53.

92
until the nineteenth:
A. G. Frank,
ReOrient: Global Economy in the Asian Age
(Berkeley, 1998); J. Goody,
The East in the West
(London, 1996); F. Fernández-Armesto,
Millennium
(London, 1995; rev. ed., 1999).

93
third millennium
B.C.:
I. C. Glover and C. F. W. Higham, “Early Rice Cultivation in South, Southeast and East Asia,” in Harris,
Origins,
pp. 413-41.

93
wore skins:
H. Maspero,
China in Antiquity
(n.p., 1978), p. 382.

94
maize cultivation:
D. W. Lathrap, “Our Father the Cayman, Our Mother the Gourd,” in C. A. Reed, ed.,
Origins of Agriculture
(The Hague, 1977), pp. 713-51, at 721-22.

94
second millennium
B.C.:
Coe,
America's First Cuisines,
p. 14.

94
“habits of life”:
Darwin,
Variation of Animals and Plants,
i, 315.

95
tempted to conquest:
Fernández-Armesto,
Civilizations,
p. 210.

96
“in companionable villages”:
P. Pray Bober,
Art, Culture and Cuisine: Ancient and Medieval Gastronomy
(Chicago, 1999), p. 62.

96
surrounding bracts:
Heiser,
Seed to Civilization,
p. 70.

97
farmed plant:
M. Spriggs, “Taro-Cropping Systems in the South-east Asian Pacific Region,”
Archaeology in Oceania,
xvii (1982), 7-15.

98
nine thousand years ago:
J. Golson, “Kuku and the Development of Agriculture in New Guinea: Retrospection and Introspection,” in D. E. Yen and J. M. J. Mummery, eds.,
Pacific Production Systems: Approaches to Economic History
(Canberra, 1983), pp. 139-47.

98
a few days:
Heiser,
Seed to Civilization,
p. 149.

99
shrines and nurseries:
D. G. Coursey, “The Origins and Domestication of Yams in Africa,” in B. K. Schwartz and R. E. Dummett,
West African Culture Dynamics
(The Hague, 1980), pp. 67-90.

99
New Guinea:
J. Golson, “No Room at the Top: Agricultural Intensification in the New Guinea Highlands,” in J. Allen et al., eds.,
Sunda and Sabul
(London, 1977), pp. 601-38.

99
earliest anywhere:
J. G. Hawkes, “The Domestication of Roots and Tubers in the American Tropics,” in D. R. Harris and G. C. Hillman, eds.,
Foraging and Farming
(London, 1989), pp. 292-304.

100
“else to eat”:
J. V. Murra,
Formaciones económicas y políticas del mundo andino
(Lima, 1975), | pp. 45-57.

100
“good to drink”:
J. Lafitau,
Moeurs des sauvages amériquains, comparés aux moeurs des premiers temps,
2 vols. (Paris,
N. D.),
i, 100-101.

CHAPTER 5: FOOD AND RANK

102
four hundred oysters at a sitting:
M. Montanari,
The Culture of Food
(Oxford, 1994), pp. 10-11.

102
hallowed by risk:
Ibid., pp. 23, 26.

103
“scorpion-fish”:
Quoted in Dalby,
Siren Feasts,
pp. 70-71, translation modified.

103
and so on:
M. Girouard,
Life in the English Country House
(New Haven, 1978), p. 12.

103
above subsistence level:
B. J. Kemp,
Ancient Egypt: Anatomy of a Civilization
(London, 1989), pp. 120-28.

104
“will have departed”:
Fernández-Armesto,
Civilizations,
pp. 226-27.

104
were served:
Flandrin and Montanari,
Histoire de l'alimentation,
p. 55.

104
“the platter itself”:
Montanari,
Culture of Food,
p. 22.

104
the broken bits:
O. Prakash,
Food and Drinks in Ancient India from Earliest Times to c.
1200 A.D.
(Delhi, 1961), p. 100.

104
wafers and cakes:
T. Wright,
The Homes of Other Days: A History of Domestic Manners and Sentiments in England
(London, 1871), p. 368. See also J. Lawrence, “Royal Feasts,”
Oxford Symposium on Food and Cookery, 1990: Feasting and Fasting: Proceedings
(London, 1990).

104
walk to a waddle:
H. Powdermaker, “An Anthropological Approach to the Problems of Obesity,”
Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine,
xxxvi (1960), in C. Counihan and P. van Esterik, eds.,
Food and Culture: A Reader
(New York, 1997), pp. 203-10.

105
out in sweat:
S. Mennell,
All Manners of Food
(Oxford, 1985), p. 33. On Louis XIV's eating habits, see B. K. Wheaton,
Savouring the Past: The French Kitchen and Table from 1300 to 1789
(London, 1983), p. 135.

105
jug of water:
Brillat-Savarin,
Philosopher in the Kitchen,
pp. 60-61.

105
“reward of pleasure”:
Ibid., p. 133.

106
“‘baked in the ashes'”:
A. J. Liebling,
Between Meals: An Appetite for Paris
(New York, 1995), p. 6.

106
“somewhat forgotten”:
The Warden
(London, 1907), pp. 114-15.

107
“having too much”:
Levenstein,
Revolution at the Table,
pp. 7-14.

108
“when I go there”: New Yorker,
1944, quoted in J. Smith,
Hungry for You
(London, 1996).

109
unit of weight:
W. R. Leonard and M. L. Robertson, “Evolutionary Perspectives on Human Nutrition: The Influence of Brain and Body Size on Diet and Metabolism,”
American Journal of Human Biology,
vi (1994), 77-88.

109
“but not us”:
J. Steingarten,
The Man Who Ate Everything
(London, 1997), p. 5.

109
few leaves at one side:
M. F. K. Fisher and S. Tsuji in S. Tsuji,
Japanese Cooking: A Simple Art
(Tokyo, 1980), pp. 8-24.

110
“on a silver bowl”:
I. Morris, ed.,
The Pillow-Book of Sei Shonagon
(Harmondsworth, 1967), pp. 69, 169.

110
“dried beans”:
L. Frédéric,
Daily Life in Japan at the Time of the Samurai, 1185-1603
(London, 1972), p. 72.

110
“eating and drinking”:
Captain Golownin,
Japan and the Japanese, Comprising the Narrative of a Captivity in Japan,
2 vols. (London, 1853), ii, 147.

110
“their game”:
R. Alcock,
The Capital of the Tycoon: A Narrative of a Three Years' Residence in Japan,
2 vols. (London, 1863), i, 272.

111
club for foreigners:
J. Street,
Mysterious Japan
(London, 1922), pp. 127-28.

111
recapture its spirit:
S. Tsuji,
Japanese Cooking,
pp. 8-14, 21-22.

111
fat and water:
Bober,
Art, Culture and Cuisine,
pp. 72-73.

111
good for stomachache:
Flandrin and Montanari,
Histoire de l'alimentation,
p. 72.

111
“most its own”:
A. Waley,
More Translations from the Chinese
(New York, 1919), pp. 13-14, quoted in Goody,
Cooking, Cuisine and Class
(Cambridge, 1982), p. 112; translation modified.

112
clotted cream and cheese:
Athenaeus,
The Deipnosophists,
iv, 147, trans. C. B. Gulick, 7 vols. (London, 1927-41), ii (1928), pp. 171-75.

112
taken indecorously:
A. Waley,
The Book of Songs
(New York, 1938), x, 7-8.

112
ever creative tension:
Goody,
Cooking, Cuisine and Class,
p. 133.

113
“sea-urchin at a glance”:
Juvenal, Satire 4, 143.

113
scattered with pearls:
T. S. Peterson,
Acquired Tastes: The French Origins of Modern Cuisine
(Ithaca, 1944), p. 48.

114
flamingos' tongues:
C. A. Déry, “Fish As Food and Symbol in Rome,” in Walker, ed.,
Oxford Symposium on the History of Food
(Totnes, 1997), pp. 94-115, at p. 97.

114
nausea in their readers:
E. Gowers,
The Loaded Table: Representations of Food in Roman Literature
(Oxford, 1993), pp. 1-24, 111.

114
white wine:
Montanari,
Culture of Food,
p. 164.

114
“between their legs”:
O. Cartellieri,
The Court of Burgundy
(London, 1972), pp. 40-52.

114
“persecuted by the Turks”:
Ibid., pp. 139-53.

115
what they had eaten:
D. Durston,
Old Kyoto
(Kyoto, 1986), p. 29.

115
“nature provides them”:
J.-C. Bonnet, “The Culinary System in the Encyclopédie,” in R. Forster and O. Ranum,
Food and Drink in History
(Baltimore, 1979), pp. 139-65, at p. 143.

116
pepper and knot grass:
Hu Sihui,
Yinshan Zhengyao—Correct Principles of Eating and Drinking,
quoted in Toussaint-Samat,
History of Food,
p. 329.

Other books

Deep Breath by Alison Kent
The Bourne Sanction by Lustbader, Eric Van, Ludlum, Robert
Wreathed by Curtis Edmonds
Suffer II by E.E. Borton
Curtains by Tom Jokinen
Bogart by Stephen Humphrey Bogart
The Haunting of Harriet by Jennifer Button
Double Trouble by Steve Elliott