Traditional Dietary Culture Of Southeast Asia

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A01=Akira Matsuyama
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Author_Akira Matsuyama
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Coconut Palm
Continental Region
cross-cultural gastronomy
culinary archaeology
Dietary Culture
Dietary Life
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eq_society-politics
fermented foods
food anthropology
Foxtail Millet
Hoabinhian Sites
indigenous food systems
Javanese Inscriptions
Khok Phanom Di
Lesser Sundas
Miscellaneous Cereals
Navigation Records
Niah Caves
Nipa Palm
Nok Tha
Palm Sugar
prehistoric Southeast Asian diets
Southeast Asian World
Spirit Cave
staple crop evolution
Sugary Sap
Traditional Dietary Culture
Upland Rice
Wet Rice Cultivation
Wet Rice Fields

Product details

  • ISBN 9780710307293
  • Weight: 1040g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Jan 2002
  • Publisher: Kegan Paul
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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First Published in 2002.Foodways can reveal the strongest and deepest traces of human history and culture, and this pioneering volume is a detailed study of the development of the traditional dietary culture of Southeast Asia from Laos and Vietnam to the Philippines and New Guinea from earliest times to the present. Being blessed with abundant natural resources, dietary culture in Southeast Asia flourished during the pre-European period on the basis of close relationships between the cultural spheres of India and China, only to undergo significant change during the rise of Islam and the age of European colonialism. What we think of as the Southeast Asian cuisine today is the result of the complex interplay of many factors over centuries. The work is supported by full geological, archaeological, biological and chemical data, and is based largely upon Southeast Asian sources which have not been available up until now. This is essential reading for anyone interested in culinary history, the anthropology of food, and in the complex history of Southeast Asia.

Professor Akira Matsuyama graduated from the University of Tokyo. He later obtained a doctorate in Agriculture from that university, later becoming Director of Radiobiology at the Institute of Physical and Chemical research. After working in Indonesia he returned to Tokyo's University of Agriculture as Visiting Professor. He is currently Honorary Scientist at the Institute of Physical and Chemical Research, Tokyo.

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