Ir y Venir: Reflexiones, Procesos y Perspectivas de Investigación Audiovisual Ricardo Cárdenas Pérez Bonilla Artigas Editores |
Goles y Banderas: Fútbol e Identidades Nacionales en España Quiroga Fernández de Soto, Alejandro Marcial Pons |
Lengua y Ritos del Palo Monte Mayombe: Dioses Cubanos y Sus Fuentes Africanas Fuentes Guerra, Jesús / Schwegler, Armin Iberoamericana Vervuert |
Entre Dos Mundos: la Antropología Radical de Paul Stoller González Varela, Sergio Bonilla Artigas Editores |
Introducción a la Antropología Cultural Phillip Kottak, Conrad Mc Graw Hill Interamericana de Mexico |
Título: Edible Medicines: An Ethnopharmacology Of Food | ||
Autor: Etkin, Nina L. | Precio: $400.00 | |
Editorial: University Of Arizona | Año: 2006 | |
Tema: Antropologia | Edición: 1ª | |
Sinopsis | ISBN: 9780816527489 | |
Chile pepper is used today as a flavoring, but Aztecs also applied it for toothache, sore throat, and asthma. The tonic properties of coffee have been recorded in Islamic pharmacopoeia since the eleventh century, and many peoples have used it to protect against Parkinson's disease. Although much has been documented regarding the nutritional values of foods, until recently little attention has been paid to the pharmacologic potential of diet. This book investigates the health implications of foods from the cuisines of peoples around the world to describe the place of food in health maintenance. In this wide-ranging book, Nina Etkin reveals the pharmacologic potential of foods in the specific cultural contexts in which they are used. Incorporating co-evolution with a biocultural perspective, she addresses some of the physiological effects of foods across cultures and through history while taking into account both the complex dynamics of food choice and the blurred distinctions between food and medicine. Showing that food choice is more closely linked to health than is commonly thought, she helps us to understand the health implications of people's food-centered actions in the context of real-life circumstances. Drawing on an extensive literature that transects food and culture, the history of medicine, ethnopharmacology, food history, nutrition, and human evolution, Edible Medicines demonstrates the intricate relationship between culture and nature. It will appeal to a wide range of scholars and professionals, from anthropologists to nutritionists, as well as general readers seeking a greater understanding of the medicinal aspects of food. |