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Anthro week 10-11

4 types of food producers

1- Horticulturalists
2- Pastoralists

3- Intensive Agriculturalists

4- Industralists

Foodways def

methods, knowledge and practices requarding food in a particular society
Includes


1- How food is collected or produced, how it is transformed, perpared and consumed


2-Studying foodways is thus studying why we eat what we eat and what it means


3-Foodgetting stredgies are apart of foodways


Food getting stategies are flexiable and non- exclusive

-One culture may use more than 1 stradegy

-Stradegies may change with time due to internal/external factors

Food foragers def

Hunter gatherers- use what is available in enivironment

Food producers def

deliberetly keep animals, farm or transform to environment to produce food

Food foragers

Humans have spent 99% of their existance using hunting/gathering for subsistence (Had alot of impact on the definition of social connections humans developed))

Food-getting stredgies and technologies were used to define the complexity of a culture

(Foraging was viewed as primate and placed at the bottom of the ladder, due to ethnocentrism and eurocentrism)


Foraging is a complex, effective and flexible stradegy (Important to not romanticise it- In some contexts, some foragers can spend up to 70 hours a week gathering food


Categorizing and lumping together cultures based on food- getting methods can be very reductive (The lifestyles of various foraging peoples share many traits, but there are also major differeneces)

Forager foodways

Daily food may consist of wild plants, animals or fish
Wild fruits/veggies, roots, seeds, tree sap, nuts, seaweed

Small/large mammels, reptiles, amphibians, birds, insects, honey, eggs, fish, marine mammels, crustaceans, shellfish

Reasources vary seasonally


Hunting is not always the primary source of food:

Ju/'hoansi (Kalahari desert) where hunting brings approx 20% of the groups categories

Forager social organization def

Foagers live/ travel together in small groups (bands)
Size of band can vary seasonally

Living in small groups often leads to less interperosnal problems (minimizes social density)

Fluid and flexible group membership helps ease interperosnal tensions

General sexual division of labour, but some tasks are open to all memebers of the group.

Bands are egalitarian, so all members recieve immediate rewards from foaraging

-Sharing is essential to survival

Foragers and the environment:

Foragers usually move frequently (nomadic)
Move seasonally across the territoty

Reduction of traditional territories due to growth of non forager societies leads to conflict and exploration

Present day foragers also have acess to store bought processed foods, but they are shared as foraged foods would be

3 types of exchanged economies

1- Reciprocity (practiced in all types of societies)
2-Redistribution (Found in societies with centeral governing authorities, like farming, pastoral or industrial societies with offcial leaders

3-Market exchange (Found in agricutural and industeral societies where surpluses are produced)

reciprocity def

set of rules that govern the sharing of food and other items

Marcel Mauss gift theory:

Social rules dictate the requirnmemts of sharing (gifting) amoung members of a group
Parties invloved in a reciprocal exchange enter into a social/economic bond

Bonds can be broken if the "gift" is not reciprocated with something of simular value

(ex- being invited to a friends house for dinner and bringing a bottle of wine)

Marshell Sahins 3 kinds of reciprocity

1-Generalized reciprocity (often invloves family and friends, no fixed expectation of a returned favour but parties have responsibilties to reciprocate at some time in a equal way)

2-Balanced reciprocity (value of an exchange is calculated and there is an excpection that the favour will be returned within a spesific time frame)


3- Negative reciprocity (One party is trying to get more from the exchange than the other person)

Horticulturalists foodways:

Activites fan out from a centeral location, the village
Small scale farming is done, with basic tools and no irrigation (relying on rainfall)

Crops vary depeding on the environment, but can include roots, tubers, grains, fruits/veggies

While certain Horticulturalist groups pratice hunting/gathering, an considerable part of their calories comes from thier crops

(EX- The Kaluli (Papua New Guinea)

Horticulturalist social organizaion

Food getting tasks are often divided between men and women (who does what varies across)
Accumination of goods,due to sedentarism, can lead to inequalities amoung the group members


Leveling mechinism (oblgation to distribute goods) develops to maintain equal level of status amoung all members

Can be done at the individual or institutional level

Horticulturalists and the environment

Swidden (slash and burn) farming is sustainable when large amounts of land are available
Widley used across the world for many crops

Plant materials are cut down then burnt directly on the plot, ashes serve as fertilizer

Movement from one plot to another is necessory for the land to "rest"

Horticulturalists practice reciprocity

Food is distributed within the village via generalized and balanced reciporocity

ex- balanced reprocity = kula rings (trobriand islands) Gift of a red shell necklace (mwaii) or white shell armbamd (soulava) is passed onto a kula partner at a spesific time +place

Pastoralist foodways

Animal husbandry is the main mode of subsistence
Depending on the environment:goats, sheep, camels, yaks, llamas, reindeer or cattle

Animals provide food staples such as milk, blood, butter, yogurt or cheese

Most pastoralist groups dont farm,but some can cultivate plants

Ex- Basseri (iran)

Pastoralist and the environmemt

Pastorlaism works in places where farming is not an option
Pastoralists move back and forth over long distances seasonally to reach productive pastures

All parts of the animal are used

Pastoralists practice reciprocity like horticultoralists sre forgners

Likely to practice generalized reciprocity within the group
Balanced reciprocity will be praticed with other groups or outsiders

Intensive Agriculturalcal foodways

rely on a variety of domesticated plants/animals
most agricultural societies depend heavely on just a handful of crops (especilly grains) and animals are used as a source of nutrition

Insensive agriculturalist social organization

Intensive agricultural cultivation requires a fully settled population
Not everyone is invloved in farming (occupational specialization)

Agricultural labours are not the farm owners

Centeraized governing body is in place, along with nobles and peasents

Intensive agriculture and the environment

Different relation with the land
Conserving future reasources vs. maximizing production

More developed tools are necessary for yearround farming, depending on the enriornment and the crop

Rice is the most commonly cultivted grain

Different varieties ae suited to different growing methods

Redistribution def

goods/money are collected by a central authority which redistributes them (ex- taxes, tribute, religious, offerings)

Market economy def

Develops in large and complex societies
Food and other goods must be traded or purchaed according to a set price, defined by supply and demand

The price remains the same for all consumers since most buyers/sellers do not know eachother personally

Money is necessary (special purpose money and multipurpose/commodity money)

Industural foodways

Food is produced using highly mechanized industry with the goal of creating a viable product at the lowest cost
Started in the 1800s in western countries with steam powered engines and now relys on gas, biochemicals and monocropping

Agricultural products are owned and sold by a handful of multinational companies and the farmers arnt in advantageous situations

Thousands of animals are raised in confined areas

Foods are generally highly processed

EX- Green revolution in INDIA

Industuralist social organization

Food producers/consumers are connected at the global scale
Most people are not involved in the food production

Most food production takes place in rural areas on private lands owned by cooperations

Food production is hieratchical (land owners, land managers, "unskiled" labours

Migrant farm workers face difficult conditions

Industeralism and the environment

Industural food production can pollute the environmemt (animal waste or biochemical inputs)
ex- agriculutal practices are responsible for 70% of all pollution in rivers/streams in the US

Harmful to people exposed to these chemicals

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