Food and gender in Fiji : ethnoarchaeological explorations

書誌事項

Food and gender in Fiji : ethnoarchaeological explorations

Sharyn Jones

Lexington Books, 2011

  • : pbk

大学図書館所蔵 件 / 2

この図書・雑誌をさがす

注記

Bibliography: p. 191-199

Includes index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Food and Gender in Fiji is an ethnoarchaeological investigation of the social relations surrounding foodways on the island of Nayau in Fiji. Writing from the perspective of an archaeologist, Jones answers questions raised by her archaeological research using original ethnographic data and material culture associated women and fishing, the intersection that forms the basis of the subsistence economy on Nayau. She focuses on food procurement on the reef, domestic activities surrounding foodways, and household spatial patterns to explore the meaning of food amongst the Lau Group of Fiji beyond the obvious nutritional and ecological spheres. Jones presents her findings alongside original archaeological data, demonstrating that it is possible to illuminate contemporary food-related social issues through historical homology and comparison with the lifeways of the Lauan people. Offering a comprehensive and rigorous example of ethnoarchaeology at work, this book has major implications for archaeological interpretations of foodways, gender, identity, and social organization in the Pacific Islands and beyond.

目次

Chapter 1 Preface Chapter 2 Chapter 1. Fieldwork: Motivations, Plans, and Realities Chapter 3 Chapter 2. The Environmental and Social Landscape: The Lau Islands, Fiji Chapter 4 Chapter 3. Foodways and Social Relations in the Past and Present Chapter 5 Chapter 4. Food Consumption Patterns and Refuse Disposal Chapter 6 Chapter 5. Lauan Fishing Chapter 7 Chapter 6. Food in the Lau Islands and Its Implications for Ethnoarchaeology and Archaeology Chapter 8 Appendix A: Archaeological Methods Chapter 9 Appendix B: Structured Ethnographic Interviews Conducted on Nayau, October and November 2003

「Nielsen BookData」 より

詳細情報

ページトップへ