Inviting Happiness: Food Sharing in Post-Communist Mongolia: Inner Asia Book Series, cartea 11
Autor Sandrine Ruhlmannen Limba Engleză Hardback – 18 sep 2019
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004409651
ISBN-10: 9004409653
Pagini: 288
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Inner Asia Book Series
ISBN-10: 9004409653
Pagini: 288
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Inner Asia Book Series
Cuprins
Preface
Acknowledgments
List of Figures
Transcription of Mongolian Terms and Names
Prologue
1 Techniques and Material Culture: Details and Design
2 Food Practices
3 The Structuring Role of Food Sharing
4 Food and Political or Religious Authorities
1 The Space
1 The Steppe
2 The Encampment
3 The Yurt
4 The Stove
5 Kitchen Utensils
2 The Fundamental Pattern of the Meal
1 A Three-Meal-a-Day System
2 (Meat-Based) Soup, the Elementary Dish
3 Meat, the “Nourishing” Food
3 From Animal to Meat Product
1 Animal Herding
2 Slaughtering
3 Skinning
4 Butchering: Processing the Meat and Bones
5 Preserving and Storing
6 Processing the Blood and the Viscera
4 Basic Culinary Techniques
1 Cutting Techniques
2 The Share
3 The Pieces
5 Cooking Modes
1 An Aversion to Raw Food
2 The Essential Boiled Mode of Cooking
3 The Other Modes of Cooking or Processing
6 Distribution and Consumption of Meals
1 Offering of the First Part
2 Presentation, Service and Etiquette
3 Consuming Shares and Pieces
4 Sorting and Processing the Leftovers and Waste
7 Food Sharing and Hospitality
1 Closed/Open Restricted Sharing
2 The Visitor and the Host: the Rule of Hospitality
3 The Sequences of Different Visits
4 The Different Kinds of Visits
5 Hospitality Dishes, Festive Features
6 The Alcohols of Hospitality: between Danger and Feast
7 From Suspicion to Identification of the Visitor
8 Restricted Sharing and the “Stock of Visitors”
9 Sharing Happiness
8 Extended Food Sharing
1 Extending Sharing Thanks to the “Stock of Visitors”
2 Specializing the Dishes
3 Inviting and Reinviting Happiness
9 The Human Soul
1 The Soul and Its Ties to the Body
2 The Soul’s Establishment in the Body
3 The Rebirth of the Soul, a Tangle of Shamanic and Buddhist Principles
10 Feast Food Practices—Birth
1 Isolation of Bodies Polluted by Blood
2 Protection of the New Mother and Her Baby
3 The Birth Soup
4 Opening and Closing the Body and Social Life
5 White Porridges and Socialization
11 Reverse of Feast Food Practices—Death
1 Rites of Inversion and Isolation of Bodies Polluted by Death
2 The Funeral Soup
3 Merits
4 Purification Rites
5 Offerings to the Deceased
12 Extended or Generalized Food Sharing and Maintenance of Social Order
1 (Meat) Soup or Broth
2 Soliciting the “Stock of Visitors”
3 Peace of Mind for the Living and Maintenance of Social Order
13 Renewal: Closing and Opening Foods, Bodies and Social Relations
1 White Month
2 Preparing the Food
3 Cleaning House for the New Year
4 Closing the Old Year
5 Opening the New Year
6 Circulating Happiness
Epilogue
Appendix
Bibliography
Glossary
Index
Acknowledgments
List of Figures
Transcription of Mongolian Terms and Names
Prologue
1 Techniques and Material Culture: Details and Design
2 Food Practices
3 The Structuring Role of Food Sharing
4 Food and Political or Religious Authorities
part 1: Ordinary Food Practices: Restricted Sharing
1 The Space
1 The Steppe
2 The Encampment
3 The Yurt
4 The Stove
5 Kitchen Utensils
2 The Fundamental Pattern of the Meal
1 A Three-Meal-a-Day System
2 (Meat-Based) Soup, the Elementary Dish
3 Meat, the “Nourishing” Food
3 From Animal to Meat Product
1 Animal Herding
2 Slaughtering
3 Skinning
4 Butchering: Processing the Meat and Bones
5 Preserving and Storing
6 Processing the Blood and the Viscera
4 Basic Culinary Techniques
1 Cutting Techniques
2 The Share
3 The Pieces
5 Cooking Modes
1 An Aversion to Raw Food
2 The Essential Boiled Mode of Cooking
3 The Other Modes of Cooking or Processing
6 Distribution and Consumption of Meals
1 Offering of the First Part
2 Presentation, Service and Etiquette
3 Consuming Shares and Pieces
4 Sorting and Processing the Leftovers and Waste
7 Food Sharing and Hospitality
1 Closed/Open Restricted Sharing
2 The Visitor and the Host: the Rule of Hospitality
3 The Sequences of Different Visits
4 The Different Kinds of Visits
5 Hospitality Dishes, Festive Features
6 The Alcohols of Hospitality: between Danger and Feast
7 From Suspicion to Identification of the Visitor
8 Restricted Sharing and the “Stock of Visitors”
9 Sharing Happiness
part 2: Extra-Ordinary Food Practices: Extended Sharing
8 Extended Food Sharing
1 Extending Sharing Thanks to the “Stock of Visitors”
2 Specializing the Dishes
3 Inviting and Reinviting Happiness
9 The Human Soul
1 The Soul and Its Ties to the Body
2 The Soul’s Establishment in the Body
3 The Rebirth of the Soul, a Tangle of Shamanic and Buddhist Principles
10 Feast Food Practices—Birth
1 Isolation of Bodies Polluted by Blood
2 Protection of the New Mother and Her Baby
3 The Birth Soup
4 Opening and Closing the Body and Social Life
5 White Porridges and Socialization
11 Reverse of Feast Food Practices—Death
1 Rites of Inversion and Isolation of Bodies Polluted by Death
2 The Funeral Soup
3 Merits
4 Purification Rites
5 Offerings to the Deceased
12 Extended or Generalized Food Sharing and Maintenance of Social Order
1 (Meat) Soup or Broth
2 Soliciting the “Stock of Visitors”
3 Peace of Mind for the Living and Maintenance of Social Order
13 Renewal: Closing and Opening Foods, Bodies and Social Relations
1 White Month
2 Preparing the Food
3 Cleaning House for the New Year
4 Closing the Old Year
5 Opening the New Year
6 Circulating Happiness
Epilogue
Appendix
Bibliography
Glossary
Index
Notă biografică
Sandrine Ruhlmann is researcher of anthropology at the French National Centre for Scientific Research. She has published many articles in French and English on Mongolian food practices and animal diseases governance in a post-communist context. Inviting Happiness: Food Sharing in Mongolia is the English-language translation of her L’appel du bonheur. Le partage alimentaire mongol, CEMS-EPHE, 2015.