Taste or Taboo Taste or Taboo

Taste or Taboo

Dietary choices in antiquity

    • $20.99
    • $20.99

Publisher Description

This book looks at the way in which food was employed in Greek and Roman literature to impart identity, whether social, individual, religious or ethnic. In many instances these markers are laid down in the way that foods were restricted, in other words by looking at the negatives instead of the positives of what was consumed. Michael Beer looks at several aspects of food restriction in antiquity, for example, the way in which they eschewed excess and glorified the simple diet; the way in which Jewish dietary restriction identified that nation under the Empire; the way in which Pythagoreans denied themselves meat (and beans); and the way in which the poor were restricted by economic reality from enjoying the full range of foods. These topics allow him to look at important aspects of Graeco-Roman social attitudes. For example, republic virtue, imperial laxity, Homeric and Spartan military valour, social control through sumptuary laws, and answers to excessive drinking. He also looks closely at the inherent divide of the Roman world between the twin centres of Greece and Rome and how it is expressed in food and its consumption.

GENRE
Food & Drink
RELEASED
2010
4 December
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
152
Pages
PUBLISHER
Marion Boyars
SELLER
Faber and Faber
SIZE
1.1
MB

More Books by Michael Beer

Fit to Compete Fit to Compete
2020
High Commitment High Performance High Commitment High Performance
2009
Understanding Human Errors in Construction Industry Understanding Human Errors in Construction Industry
2023
Civil Resistance Tactics in the 21st Century Civil Resistance Tactics in the 21st Century
2021
Higher Ambition Higher Ambition
2011