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A Movable Feast
Ten Millennia of Food Globalization

$29.99 (G)

  • Date Published: August 2013
  • availability: Available
  • format: Paperback
  • isbn: 9781107657458

$ 29.99 (G)
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About the Authors
  • In the last twenty-five years alone, the range of fruits and vegetables, even grains, that is available at most local markets has changed dramatically. Over the last 10,000 years, that change is almost unimaginable. This groundbreaking new work, from the editor of the highly regarded Cambridge World History of Food, examines the exploding global palate. It begins with the transition from foraging to farming that got underway some 10,000 years ago in the Fertile Crescent, then examines subsequent transitions in Egypt, Africa south of the Sahara, China, southeast Asia, the Indus Valley Oceanic, Europe, and the Americas. It ends with chapters on genetically modified foods, the fast food industry, the nutritional ailments people have suffered from, famine, the obesity epidemic, and a look at the future on the food front. Food, at its most basic, fuels the human body. At its most refined, food has been elevated to a position of fine art. The path food has taken through history is a fairly straightforward one; the space which it occupies today could not be more fraught. This sweeping narrative covers both ends of the spectrum, reminding us to be grateful for and delighted in a grain of wheat, as well as making us aware of the many questions that remain unanswered about what lies ahead. Did you know. . . - That beans were likely an agricultural mistake? - That cheese making was originated in Iran over 6000 years ago? - That pepper was once worth its weight in gold? - That sugar is the world's best-selling food, surpassing even wheat? - That Winston Churchill asserted, in 1942, that tea was more important to his troops than ammunition? - That chili con carne is one of the earliest examples of food globalization? - That, by 1880, virtually every major city in America had a Chinese restaurant? - That white bread was once considered too nutritious? Kenneth Kiple reveals these facts and more within A Movable Feast.

    • Chronicles the globalization of food over the past ten thousand years
    • Investigates food's global impact, from the Irish potato famine to the birth of McDonald's
    • Combining fascinating facts with historical evidence, this is a sweeping narrative of food's place in the world
    Read more

    Reviews & endorsements

    "...this slender volume distills 10,000 years of food history into just 300 pages... The strongest material examines the spread of agriculture and its ramifications... gastronomes will find scraps to nibble on...."
    -Publishers Weekly

    "...the book is filled with many intriguing culinary facts and tasty tidbits of food history."
    -Library Journal

    "It is a fascinating tale... it is brimming with curious titbits... Anyone interested in the history of food for whom “The Cambridge World History of Food” seems too large a helping will find Mr Kiple's sprightly summary volume far more palatable."
    -The Economist

    "In a few short paragraphs, Mr. Kiple summarizes huge ideas...."
    -National Post

    "...delightful work... There are countless fascinating food and drink details in A Movable Feast . But Kiple's story of globalization is particularly interesting not for its incidentals but for the connections it makes between food-ways and what we would generally describe as real history."
    -Jennifer Hewett, The American Interest

    "...a smorgasbord of tidbits about our culinary influences, from legumes to Lent to Lindy's restaurant."
    -Chicago Sun Times

    "Kenneth Kiple has written a delicious history of food, from the pickings our earliest ancestors happened to find under the trees to the amazing range of food available in the nearest supermarket today, from the first domesticated pigs to the prime pork chops we ate for dinner last night. This is a cornucopia of information about food, both profound and fun, a history, a reference book, and a collection of fascinating facts."
    -Bunny Crumpacker, author of The Sex Life of Food

    "The subtitle suggests a pretty tall order for Mr. Kiple to deliver but he does so in a way that the linkage and connections between our neolithic ancestors and ourselves is neither to be dismissed as progress nor trifled with as evidence of what has gone wrong on our planet and its food chain over the last 10,000 years. "
    -Virtual Gourmet

    "As the world struggles with food safety and legislating the table, looking back at how far the world's food supply has evolved can give us perspective. Thanks to food historians and authors such as Kenneth F. Kiple we can do that....There's plenty of food for thought in these pages."
    -The Toledo Blade

    "...plenty of answers to intriguing questions...."
    -St. Louis Post

    "Is this, then, a volume, you should rush out and buy? If you chief interest is in the nutritional effects of changing diets...you might well find it worthwhile."
    -Gastronomica

    "I was pleased to find three commendable qualities in this well-produced and reasonably priced volume: it is packed with fascinating information; it is an admirable exposition on the human propensity to elaborate and find meaning in the most mundane daily tasks and material items; and it would be a useful supplementary text for a course in historical or colonial archaeology."
    -Jonathan Driver, Simon Fraser University, Canadian Journal of Archaeology

    "...Kiple must be congratulated for an informative and unusually entertaining synthesis of ten millennia of history. His expertise in the study of health and disease is apparent, and he is particularly strong when examining the relationship between food preparation, consumption patterns, and well-being."
    -Canadian Journal of History

    "...a book to savor, and to dip back into again and again to nibble at the storehouse of information within." -Kristen M. Burkholder, H-Atlantic

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    Product details

    • Date Published: August 2013
    • format: Paperback
    • isbn: 9781107657458
    • length: 381 pages
    • dimensions: 228 x 153 x 20 mm
    • weight: 0.53kg
    • availability: Available
  • Table of Contents

    Preface: a movable feast: ten millennia of food globalization
    Introduction: from foraging to farming
    1. Last hunters, first farmers
    2. Building the barnyard
    3. Promiscuous plants of the northern fertile crescent
    4. Peripatetic plants of Eastern Asia
    5. Fecund fringes of the northern fertile crescent
    6. Consequences of the Neolithic
    7. Enterprise and empires
    8. Faith and foodstuffs
    9. Empires in the rubble of Rome
    10. Medieval progress and poverty
    11. Spain's New World, the Northern Hemisphere
    12. New world, new foods
    13. New foods in the southern New World
    14. The Columbian exchange and the Old Worlds
    15. The Columbian exchange and the New Worlds
    16. Sugar and new beverages
    17. Kitchen Hispanization
    18. Producing plenty in paradise
    19. The frontiers of foreign foods
    20. Capitalism, colonialism, and cuisine
    21. Homemade food homogeneity
    22. Notions of nutrients and nutriments
    23. The perils of plenty
    24. The globalization of plenty
    25. Fast food, a hymn to cellulite
    26. Parlous plenty into the twenty-first century
    27. People and plenty in the twenty-first century.

  • Author

    Kenneth F. Kiple, Bowling Green State University, Ohio
    Kenneth F. Kiple is a Distinguished University Professor Emeritus at Bowling Green State University in Ohio. His edited collections include The Cambridge Historical Dictionary of Disease (2003); The Cambridge World History of Food (2000, with Kriemhild Conee Ornelas); Biological Consequences of European Expansion 1450–1800 (1997, with Stephen V. Beck); Plague, Pox, and Pestilence: Disease in History (1997); The Cambridge History of World Disease (1993); and The African Exchange: Toward a Biological History of Black People (1987). Kiple is author of The Caribbean Slave: A Biological History (1984); Another Dimension to the Black Diaspora: Diet, Disease, and Racism (1981); and Blacks in Colonial Cuba 1774–1899 (1976, with Virginia Himmelsteib King). His considerable body of written works also includes numerous articles and essays in scholarly journals and books. His work has been supported with grants and fellowships from institutions including the Guggenheim Foundation, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Fulbright Foundation, the American Council of Learned Societies, the American Philosophical Society and the National Institutes of Health.

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