by Bryant Simon (Editor), Bryant Simon (Editor), James C. Giesen (Editor)
Guides students through a rich menu of American history through food and eating
This book features a wide and diverse range of primary sources covering the cultivation, preparation, marketing, and consumption of food from the time before Europeans arrived in North America to the present-day United States. It is organized around what the authors label the Four P's --production, politics, price, and preference--in order to show readers that food represents something more than nutrition and the daily meals that keep us alive. The documents in this book demonstrate that food we eat is a highly condensed social fact that both reflects and is shaped by politics, economics, culture, religion, region, race, class, and gender.
Food and Eating in America covers more than 500 years of American food and eating history with sections on: An Appetizer: What Food and Eating Tell Us About America; Hunting, Harvesting, Starving, and the Occasional Feast: Food in Early America; Fields and Foods in the Nineteenth Century; Feeding a Modern World: Revolutions in Farming, Food, and Famine; and Counterculture Cuisines and Culinary Tourism.
Food and Eating in America: A Documentary Reader is an ideal book for students of United States history, food, and the social sciences. It will also appeal to foodies and those with a curiosity for documentary-style books of all kinds.
Format: Illustrated
Pages: 352
Edition: 1
Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell
Published: 16 Mar 2018
ISBN 10: 1118936388
ISBN 13: 9781118936382
James C. Giesen is a history professor at Mississippi State University, and serves as the executive secretary of the Agricultural History Society and editor of the University of Georgia Press series, Environmental History and the American South.
Bryant Simon is a professor of history at Temple University and the author of four books and two edited collections, including most recently, Food, Power, and Agency (with Juergen Martschukat), and The Hamlet Fire: A Tragic Story of Cheap Food, Cheap Government, and Cheap Lives.