Eating and Healing

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A01=Andrea Pieroni
A01=Lisa Price
Ac Ea
Araguaia River
Arbutus Unedo
atlantic
Atlantic Forest Areas
Atlantic Forest Coast
Author_Andrea Pieroni
Author_Lisa Price
Category=WBH
Ce Ae
Cuminum Cyminum
edible
Edible Wild Plants
Edible Wild Species
eq_bestseller
eq_food-drink
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
ethnopharmacology
food
foods
forest
functional foods
Globularia Alypum
GSH Px Level
Gynandropsis Gynandra
human ecology methods
La Xa
medicinal
Medicinal Fish
medicinal plants research
medicines
Northeast Thailand
nutritional anthropology
plant
plants
Punica Granatum
Rorippa Nasturtium Aquaticum
South Cameroon
Tibetan Medicine
traditional dietary practices
Traditional Food Items
Traditional Vegetables
Volvariella Volvacea
wild
Wild Edible
wild edible species case studies
Wild Plant Foods
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781560229827
  • Weight: 635g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Mar 2006
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Discover neglected wild food sourcesthat can also be used as medicine!

The long-standing notion of food as medicine, medicine as food, can be traced back to Hippocrates. Eating and Healing: Traditional Food As Medicine is a global overview of wild and semi-domesticated foods and their use as medicine in traditional societies. Important cultural information, along with extensive case studies, provides a clear, authoritative look at the many neglected food sources still being used around the world today. This book bridges the scientific disciplines of medicine, food science, human ecology, and environmental sciences with their ethno-scientific counterparts of ethnobotany, ethnoecology, and ethnomedicine to provide a valuable multidisciplinary resource for education and instruction.

Eating and Healing: Traditional Food As Medicine presents respected researchers’ in-depth case studies on foods different cultures use as medicines and as remedies for nutritional deficiencies in diet. Comparisons of living conditions in different geographic areas as well as differences in diet and medicines are thoroughly discussed and empirically evaluated to provide scientific evidence of the many uses of these traditional foods as medicine and as functional foods. The case studies focus on the uses of plants, seaweed, mushrooms, and fish within their cultural contexts while showing the dietary and medical importance of these foods. The book provides comprehensive tables, extensive references, useful photographs, and helpful illustrations to provide clear scientific support as well as opportunities for further thought and study.

Eating and Healing: Traditional Food As Medicine explores the ethnobiology of:

  • Tibetantioxidants as mediators of high-altitude nutritional physiology
  • Northeast Thailandwild food plant gathering
  • Southern Italythe consumption of wild plants by Albanians and Italians
  • Northern Spainmedicinal digestive beverages
  • United Statesmedicinal herb quality
  • Commonwealth of Dominicahumoral medicine and food
  • Cubapromoting health through medicinal foods
  • Brazilmedicinal uses of specific fishes
  • Brazilplants from the Amazon and Atlantic Forest
  • Bolivian Andestraditional food medicines
  • New Patagoniagathering of wild plant foods with medicinal uses
  • Western Kenyauses of traditional herbs among the Luo people
  • South Cameroonethnomycology in Africa
  • Moroccofood medicine and ethnopharmacology

Eating and Healing: Traditional Food As Medicine is an essential research guide and educational text about food and medicine in traditional societies for educators, students from undergraduate through graduate levels, botanists, and research specialists in nutrition and food science, anthropology, agriculture, ethnoecology, ethnobotany, and ethnobiology.

Andrea Pieroni, PhD, is an ethnobotanist/pharmacognosist and Lecturer in Pharmacognosy at the School of Pharmacy of the University of Bradford, United Kingdom. He is also part-time associate professor in the Department of Social Sciences at the Wageningen University in the Netherlands. Currently he is the scientific coordinator of a European Union-funded research project dealing with a circumMediterranean ethnobotanical study on wild and neglected plants for food and medicine. Lisa Leimar Price, PhD, is an anthropologist and associate professor in the Department of Social Sciences, Wageningen University, the Netherlands. She has been a Rockefeller Fellow for Social Scientists in Agriculture, a Ford Foundation Fellow, and a Fulbright Fellow. Prior to joining Wageningen University, she was a senior scientist at the International Rice Research Institute in the Philippines.

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