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Copyright 2007, The Johns Hopkins University and Sid Mintz. All rights reserved. Use of these materials permitted only in accordance with license rights granted. Materials provided “AS IS”; no representations or warranties provided. User assumes all responsibility for use, and all liability related thereto, and must independently review all materials for accuracy and efficacy. May contain materials owned by others. User is responsible for obtaining permissions for use from third parties as needed. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike License . Your use of this material constitutes acceptance of that license and the conditions of use of materials on this site.

Transcript of ution- se . Your use of this - JHSPH OCWocw.jhsph.edu/.../2013PDFs/FoodEnvOCW2013-OptSR2A_Mintz.pdf4...

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Copyright 2007, The Johns Hopkins University and Sid Mintz. All rights reserved. Use of these materials permitted only in accordance with license rights granted. Materials provided “AS IS”; no representations or warranties provided. User assumes all responsibility for use, and all liability related thereto, and must independently review all materials for accuracy and efficacy. May contain materials owned by others. User is responsible for obtaining permissions for use from third parties as needed.

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike License. Your use of this material constitutes acceptance of that license and the conditions of use of materials on this site.

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Cultural and Behavioral Determinants

Sidney MintzJohns Hopkins University

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Sidney Mintz

� Research Professor, Johns Hopkins University Department of Anthropology

� Fieldwork in Puerto Rico, Jamaica, Haiti, Iran, and Hong Kong

� Publications include Sweetness and Power: The Place of Sugar in Modern History; Tasting Food, Tasting Freedom: Excursions into Eating, Culture and the Past; The World of Soy

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Section A

Culture and Food Patterns

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Main Points

1.

How culture—rather than nature—provides the human background for food choice

2.

What is meant when we speak of “natural food”?

3.

What does “natural human food”

really mean?

4.

Whether a basic human cuisine has evolved in broad outline in human history

5.

Where protein fits into the overall picture of human food choice

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Culture

Photo by Ryan Somma

via flickr.com. Creative Commons BY-SA.

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Human Food Choices

� Historical—not biological� For example, fire made previously inedible foods edible�

Graminiae

(rice, maize, wheat)

Leguminosae

(legumes, pulses, beans)

Araceae

(taro, yautia

or tannia)

Solonaceae

(tomato, potato)

Convolvulaceae

(sweet potatoes)

Dioscoraceae

(yams)

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Humans Have the Capacity to Create Culture

� Technological changes by humans� All animals have natural histories� Humans have natural histories + histories of our own making� For example, human language�

In contrast to built-in capacity to learn and speak a language

No language is “natural”

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Is There Such a Thing As a “Natural”

Food?

� No foods are “natural”�

Maybe mother’s milk?

Maybe sweetness?� Biological predisposition toward fat?� Umami?

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Human Food Choices Are Historical

� Development of food behaviors depended on various natural constraints, such as�

Locality

Seasons�

Flora and fauna

Economic and sociological organizations developed by the people

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If It Can Be Eaten, Someone Eats It!

False Morels. Public Domain.

Fugu in Tank by Chris 73. Some rights reserved.

Whopper. Public DomainImage source: USGS.

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Food Is Saturated with Symbolic (Extrinsic) Meaning

Hafiz. Prince Entertained on a Terrace. Public Domain.

Seder Plate. Public Domain.

Tailgating by MaxPower. Some rights reserved.

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From Hunter-Gatherers to Domesticators

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Domestication of Animals

� Capturing of reproductive processes� Not just “taming” for human use and interaction� Continuity of reproduction� Human interference by breeding

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Domestication of Food Production

� Ordinary people undertook the science of agriculture

Public Domain

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Processes of Animal Domestication

� Isolating reproduction� Limiting sphere of movement� Interfering with feeding patterns

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Important Role of Domestication and Agriculture

� Increased food security� Led to population growth� Facilitated spread of human species� Most humans were born after domestication of plants and

animals

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Agricultural “Hearths”

� Examples �

Nile Valley

South Asia�

Andes

Mexican Central Plateau� For further exploration�

N. Vavilov: Origin and Geography of Cultivated Plants

E. Anderson: Plants, Man, and Life

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Agricultural Hearths—Patterns

� Began with core complex carbohydrate (cereal or tuber) � Paired with legume or pulse (chickpea, bean, peanut,

soybean)� Complementary foods—provide nutritional synergy

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Food Patterns

� Carbohydrate/tuber = CORE� Legume = PULSE� Flavoring addition = FRINGE

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Examples of Core + Pulse + Fringe

Core + Pulse + Fringe

Mexican Central Plateau

Maize + Red Beans +Tomatoes &

Peppers

Middle East Wheat + Chick Peas +Olives, Sesame

Seeds. etc.

Asia Rice + Soy Beans + Ginger, Leeks, etc.

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Core, Fringe, Legume

� Three elements identifiable in each major agrarian society� Contents of each category may differ� Contents of each category in each society/place reflects the

intersection of culture and environment

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Core, Pulse, Fringe

� Notable for a lack of animal protein� Versus “high on the hog” in U.S. and few elite in other cultures� Few domesticated animals�

Often used more for milk, cheese, riding, leather, rather than as meat