What Shall We Eat Tonight?: Categorisation,
restriction and the archaeology of food
Session Organiser: Leo Aoi Hosoya
(University of Cambridge)
"What to eat?" Behind this our daily
question, there work various tangled factors. Let alone environmental availability
and physical edibility of plants or animals, cultural categorisation and
social restriction, which is unique to each social group, play a big role
on our recognition of "What should be food" and among them, "What is most
important food".
To study this complex background of
the choice of "food" in archaeology beyond classic associations of it to
such as environmental or population pressure, bio-archaeology, which enables
to directly trace animal and plant remnants on their relationship to a
human culture in which they were utilised, is indispensable. In other words,
this is one of spheres which bio-archaeology, on the contrary to its stereotype
image of "Nothing to do with the theoretical discussion", takes a vital
part for discussion on the society and culture on its value-making process.
For the aim of this session, we are
discussing practically how we can develop this aspect of archaeological
study on plant and faunal analyses, based on world-wide research examples
shown in the papers- Japan, India, Central Europe, Egypt and Peru.
Leo Aoi Hosoya
(George Pitt-Rivers Laboratory, McDonald
Institute for Archaeological Research, University of Cambridge, Cambridge
CB2 3ER UK)
Contact- and the Day After: Introduction of
rice and its impact to Japanese prehistoric social transformation
In the human history, introduction
of a new food plant has played a significant role through a contacting
process among alien communities. Introduced plants were sometimes rejected,
other times accepted in various levels, and the how a community reacts
to an exotic food plant is not a simple economic matter, but a result of
their culturally unique valuing of the plant, and reflects the ethnic identity,
the power relationship in the exchange, and so on.
The introduction of rice agriculture
into Japan from the Continental Asia around 300 BC, which lead very a drastic
structural change of the society after existence of 10,000-year long stable
fishing-hunting-gathering life style, is a good example of how introduction
of an exotic plant produced an impact on the existing social system. To
explain why they accepted rice and the associated agricultural life style,
socially attached meanings to the crop created on the political relationship
between Japan and the Continent have to be archaeobotanically scrutinised.
In this paper I will discuss this problem including consideration of the
previous Japanese archaeologists' characteristic way to approach the topic,
who themselves are much influenced by the modern concept of "Rice as the
Japanese Symbol of the Culture", and how new archaeobotanical methods can
open another view to the study.
Dorian Q Fuller
(George Pitt-Rivers Laboratory, McDonald
Institute for Archaeological Research, University of Cambridge, Cambridge
CB2 3ER UK)
Cultural Constraints and Compatibilities in
Crop Adoptions: Examples from Indian archaeobotany
Although it is possible to delimit
environmental constraints on the distribution of crops, these often fail
to explain chronological and spatial patterns of their cultivation in prehistory.
In South Asia number of disparities are notable, such as the lack of African
millets within the Harappan sphere when they were readily being adopted
on its periphery and the delay in the acceptance of rice in peninsular
India. This paper will explore some of the potential cultural and social
factors affecting the adoptions of these crops, in particular with regards
to how already existing agricultural practices reproduced structures into
which new crops did not necessarily fit. The adoption of a new crop requires
more than just environmental suitability and implies adjustments to cultural
values or practices. The dissolution of the Harappan archaeological culture
as well as the central Indian chalcolithic Malwa culture might both be
seen as changes in social organisation due in part to restructuring cultivation
and animal husbandry practices.
Arkadiusz Marciniak
(Institute of Prehistory, University
of Poznan, sw.Marcin 78, 61-809 Poznan Poland)
Animal Bone Assemblages and Social Sphere:
Example of the Central European Neolithic
Animal bones recovered from archaeological
sites of Central European Neolithic are commonly used to reconstruct aspects
of prehistoric economy and diet. Vast majority of Central European archaeozoological
studies identify and quantify these faunal remains in order to give some
idea of the relative proportion of animals consumed. Thus, these faunal
analyses are characterised by economic bias. This bias has to be overcome
by focusing on the social side of animal-human interaction. The most effective
approach comprises explicit use of actualistic studies on the recognition
of formation processes of a given animal bone assemblage. The objective
of the next step of the analysis, taking into account the results of the
previous one, is to consider social and ritual practices and their impact
on interpretation of characteristics of faunal assemblages as; species
composition, sex and age profiles, body part representation, etc. This
perspective forces us to look differently at various processes occurred
in prehistory. Some examples from Central European Neolithic are provided
to illustrate the general concept.
Andy Fairbairn
(Institute of Archaeology, 31-34 Gordon
Square, London WC1H0PY email: tcrnasf@ucl.ac.uk)
Spreading the faith? Causewayed enclosures,
pits and the spread of crops across Neolithic Southern Britain
Plant remains from prehistoric sites
in Britain have traditionally been interpreted as representing the debris
of subsistence related activities. The study of plant remains from a series
of Neolithic contexts at Windmill Hill in Wiltshire has attempted to interpret
the charred plant remains in relation to other artefact types, artefact
associations and social context in which use may have occurred rather than
relying on universal assumptions about plant use and significance. Although
a fragile and almost invisible archaeological resource, the charred plant
remains from these contexts can be traced to deliberate acts of plant use.
The causewayed enclosure and pits may be the archaeological traces of meeting
places where disparate social groups met and engaged in social and economic
exchanges. In such contexts plant use may have occurred for a variety of
reasons beyond subsistence. The functions and reasons for plant use within
the social arena of the enclosure will be discussed as will be the significance
of these acts of consumption and the possible pivotal role of such sites
in the exchange and spread of crops plants across Southern Britain.
Mary Harlow & Wendy Smith
(Department of Ancient History and
Archaeology, University of Birmingham, Birmingham B15 2TT UK & School
of Archaeological Studies, University of Leicester, Leicester LE1 7RH UK)
Between Fasting and Feasting: The historical
and archaeobotanical evidences for Monastic Diet (Egypt)
Fasting was an important element of
early Christian behaviour. Accounts of fasting pepper the literary texts
on the saintly lives from Late Antique Egypt. Within these sources, debates
over the appropriate amount of fasting or restriction of certain foods
from the diet abound. There also is no doubt that these religious texts
were intended to establish saintly figures as behavioural role models and
that, at times, they tend toward exaggeration. Even so, can we risk ignoring
these histories of monastic behaviour simply because certain texts clearly
do not reflect real life but are intended to illustrate a complex, sometimes
conflicting, set of ideals?
In spite of a wealth of sources describing
acts of fasting, the reality must be that food was consumed at regular
intervals. So, what was the monastic diet? To date, discussion of monastic
dietary practice has been largely a historical debate. Although we do not
discount this approach and will use it ourselves, this paper departs from
this academic tradition by incorporating new archaeobotanical evidence
from the recent excavations of the 5th - 7th century AD monastery at Kom
el - Nana, Middle Egypt into the study of monastic diet. It is our belief
that use of this new archaeobotanical data will provide a second and independent
source of evidence on monastic diet which can be used to re-examine our
current understanding of monastic diet in Late Antique Egypt.
Christine A Hastorf
(Department of Anthropology, University
of California, Berkeley, USA)
Why Women Planted Plants (Peru)
I focus on the social side of plant
mothering and cultivation. Early activities with plants began because of
individual plant's special meanings. Gatherers and hunters associated or
identified certain plants with themselves and their family, due to the
activities the plants participated in, the place where this occurred, or
the people they represented. Women brought plants into their family to
be cared for, like their children. These early plants were used, transported,
and traded because of these associations with kin; the plants representing
a person, place, or lineage. The spread of this activity accompanied changes
in human relationships, such as the development of group or lineage identity.
If the earliest plants to be nurtured are not exotic, morphologically altered,
or densely deposited, archaeologists cannot recognise agriculture in the
archaeological record. Early propagated plants tend not to be carbohydrate,
staple crops, but rather medicinal, industrial, spicy, hallucinatory, or
merely exotic. Places like the desertic Peruvian coast, where virtually
all cultivated plants are foreign, make such a subtle artifactual event
more visible to archaeologists. There we see spicy and industrial plants
being nurtured for a long time, before steady and staple-product farming
begins. I propose that this process was instigated by women.