Good to Eat: Riddles of Food and CultureSimon and Schuster, 1985 - 289 páginas Why are human food habits so diverse? Why do Americans recoil at the thought of dog meat? Jews and Moslems, pork? Hindus, beef? Why do Asians abhor milk? In Good to Eat, bestselling author Marvin Harris leads readers on an informative detective adventure to solve the world's major food puzzles. He explains the diversity of the world's gastronomic customs, demonstrating that what appear at first glance to be irrational food tastes turn out really to have been shaped by practical, or economic, or political necessity. In addition, his smart and spirited treatment sheds wisdom on such topics as why there has been an explosion in fast food, why history indicates that it's "bad" to eat people but "good" to kill them, and why children universally reject spinach. Good to Eat is more than an intellectual adventure in food for thought. It is a highly readable, scientifically accurate, and fascinating work that demystifies the causes of myriad human cultural differences. |
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Página 225
... warfare cannibalism also lacked the highly pro- ductive agriculture and fisheries which characterized the politi- cally centralized Polynesian Islands . To sum up . In Oceania at least , the predicted relationship between warfare ...
... warfare cannibalism also lacked the highly pro- ductive agriculture and fisheries which characterized the politi- cally centralized Polynesian Islands . To sum up . In Oceania at least , the predicted relationship between warfare ...
Página 229
... cannibalism . The peasants of India and China probably lived no better than the Aztec peasants . The pinch did not occur on the mass level but on the level of the military and religious elites and their followers . By repressing warfare ...
... cannibalism . The peasants of India and China probably lived no better than the Aztec peasants . The pinch did not occur on the mass level but on the level of the military and religious elites and their followers . By repressing warfare ...
Página 230
... warfare cannibalism occurs at all is premised on the assumption that warfare cannibalism is a by - product of warfare and that its costs can be written off almost entirely as costs of war which would have been incurred whether or not ...
... warfare cannibalism occurs at all is premised on the assumption that warfare cannibalism is a by - product of warfare and that its costs can be written off almost entirely as costs of war which would have been incurred whether or not ...
Contenido
ONE Good to Think or Good to Eat? | 13 |
TWO Meat Hunger | 19 |
THREE The Riddle of the Sacred Cow | 47 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
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