Toward a Social Archaeology of Food in Northern North America
Part of: Society for American Archaeology 82nd Annual Meeting, Vancouver, BC (2017)
Archaeology in northern North America has long focused on documenting and modelling hunter-gatherer subsistence strategies within a framework that views the procurement, processing, and consumption of food in terms of peoples’ adaptations to the natural environment. While important, it is clear from the ethnographic record of the region that "food" embodied and offered more to hunter-gatherers than mere sustenance. This session offers case studies that highlight cultural dimensions of northern foods in antiquity. Papers address the social construction of edible and inedible foods; the preparation and presentation of food--cuisine; the transformation of plants, animals, and non-human persons into food; the role of food in the crafting of identity, the construction of gender, and status; food in trade, feasting, and ceremonial activities; and social and ideological aspects of the procurement, processing, consumption, and discard of food.
Other Keywords
Pottery •
Zooarchaeology •
Fauna •
Subsistence •
Shell Middens •
Hunter-Gatherers •
Boreal Forest •
Hunter-Gatherer •
Foodways •
Protohistoric
Geographic Keywords
North America (Continent) •
Canada (Country) •
United States of America (Country) •
USA (Country) •
Yukon Territory (State / Territory) •
Wisconsin (State / Territory) •
Michigan (State / Territory) •
Minnesota (State / Territory) •
South Dakota (State / Territory) •
North Dakota (State / Territory)
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-9 of 9)
- Documents (9)
- The Beaver of Children and the Poor: The Social Dimension of Fur-Bearing Mammal Exploitation in Central British Columbia (2017)
- Cultural Dimensions of Food Procurement on Martha’s Vineyard (2017)
- Early pottery and the quest for fat in Northeastern North America (2017)
- Gendered Differences in the Consumption and Discard of Food in Arctic Alaska (2017)
- Prestige Foods and the Adoption of Pottery by Subarctic Foragers (2017)
- The social implications of elk hunting for ancestral Coast Salish communities (2017)
- Toward a social archaeology of food in later Newfoundland pre/history (2017)
- Wabanaki Foodways in the Protohistoric Quoddy Region: Hunter-Gatherer Continuity, Change, and Specialization in a Changing Social Seascape (2017)
- What's in a Hole? Memory, Knowledge, and Personhood in the Cache Pit Food Storage Features of Northern Michigan (2017)