Feast : a history of grand eating / Roy Strong.
Material type: TextPublisher: London : Jonathan Cape, 2002Description: xvii, 349 pages : illustrations ; 24 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 0224061380
- 9780224061384
- 394.1209
Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | City Campus City Campus Main Collection | 394.1209 STR (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | A410786B |
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394.1209 ART The art of drinking / | 394.1209 DIN Dining on turtles : food feasts and drinking in history / | 394.1209 OCO The never-ending feast : the anthropology and archaeology of feasting / | 394.1209 STR Feast : a history of grand eating / | 394.120901 FOO Food and identity in the ancient world / | 394.12093 WIL Food in the ancient world / | 394.120937 ROM Roman dining : a special issue of American Journal of Philology / |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Ch. 1. Convivium: When in Rome ... The Greek inheritance. The age of Apicius. Cena and convivium. Public and imperial banquets. Disintegration and survival -- Ch. 2. Interlude: Fast and Feast. Cuisine: the silent centuries. The Christian table and the birth of manners. Feast as power. A reconciliation of opposites -- Ch. 3. In the Eye of the Beholder. Cooks, cookery books and cuisine. The tripumph of conspicuous consumption. Manners maketh man. Enter the entremets -- Ch. 4. Renaissance Ritual. The refinement of cuisine. Pliny relived and the reinvention of the dining-room. Convivium revived. The Renaissance banquet. Feast into fantasy. The collation and banquet. Meals and the mystery of monarchy -- Ch. 5. From Court to Cabinet. The triumph of illusion. A culinary revolution. Service a la francaise and tablescapes. The salle a manger and eating rooms. Manners into etiquette. Messieurs, au couvert du Roi! Food and festival at Versailles. The quest for informality -- Ch. 6. Dinner is Served. From revolution to the return of ritual. The century of Careme. The proliferation of the dining-room and shifting mealtimes. The dinner party. Service a la francaise to service a la russe. The ritual and etiquette of dinner. The way we live now. Postscript: The Eclipse of the Table?
"Toenails cut while dining, meals served to wax effigies of the dead, napkins concealing singing birds, dishes descending from the ceiling - these are just a few of the more exotic aspects of everyman at table. From the stupendous banquets of the Ancient Babylonians, Feast covers five millennia of formal eating." "Feast offers a fascinating and, at times, highly unusual mirror of society. It gathers together for the first time all the ingredients which contributed to the phenomenon of the celebratory meal: the people, the clothes, the food, the setting, the action and its circumstances." "In an age which has virtually abolished the shared meal as a central feature of daily living, Feast presents a revelatory picture of a world we have lost. Beautifully illustrated, it traces fashions in food and the etiquette of eating, taking the reader from the elegancies of the Roman villa to the austerities of the monastic refectory, from the splendours of the Renaissance banquet to the rigours of the Victorian dinner party."--BOOK JACKET.
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