K’Oben traces the Maya kitchen and its associated hardware,
ingredients, and cooking styles from the earliest times for which we
have archaeological evidence through today’s culinary tourism in the
area. It focuses not only on what was eaten and how it was cooked, but
the people involved: who grew or sourced the foods, who cooked them,
who ate them. Additionally, the authors examine how Maya foodways and
the people involved fit into the social system, particularly in how
food is incorporated into culture, economy, and society. The authors
provide a detailed literature review of hard-to-find sources
including: out of print centuries old cookbooks, archaeological field
notes, ethnographies and ethnohistories out of circulation and not
available in English, thesis documents only available in Spanish and
in university archives as well as current field research on the Maya.
The more recent Maya foodways can be studied from cookbooks,
ethnographies and ethnohistorical documentation. Between the two of
us, we have assembled a small but representative collection of
cookbooks, some self-published and rare, that were available in Merida
and elsewhere in Mexico during the late 20th century. Some are quite
old, and all reflect local traditional foodways. Geographically, the
book concentrates on Yucatan, Tabasco and Chiapas in Mexico, but will
include Pre-Classic and Classic evidence from Guatemala and El
Salvador, whose foodways are influenced by Maya traditions.
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3,000 Years of the Maya Hearth
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781442255265
Publisert
2017
Utgiver
Vendor
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter