Feasting in Southeast Asia

Paperback: $32.00
ISBN-13: 9780824876777
Published: March 2018
Hardback: $80.00
ISBN-13: 9780824856267
Published: November 2016

Additional Information

332 pages | 92 b&w illustrations
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  • About the Book
  • Feasting has long played a crucial role in the social, political, and economic dynamics of village life. It is far more than a gustatory and social diversion from daily work routines: alliances are brokered by feasts; debts are created and political battles waged. Feasts create enormous pressure to increase the production of food and prestige items in order to achieve the social and political goals of their promoters. In fact, Brian Hayden argues, the domestication of plants and animals likely resulted from such feasting pressures. Feasting has been one of the most important forces behind cultural change since the end of the Paleolithic era.

    Feasting in Southeast Asia documents the dynamics of traditional feasting and the ways in which a bewildering array of different types of feasts benefits hosts. Hayden argues that people’s ability to marry, reproduce, defend themselves against threats and attacks, and protect their interests in village politics all depend on their ability to engage in feasting networks. To be excluded from such networks means to be subject to attack by social predators, perhaps even leading to enslavement. As an archaeologist, Hayden pays specific attention to the materials involved in feasting and how feasting might be identified and interpreted from archaeological remains. His conclusions are based on his own ethnographic field studies in Thailand, Laos, Vietnam, and Indonesia, as well as a comparative overview of the regional literature on feasting. Hayden gives particular attention to the longhouses of Vietnam, an unusual but important social unit that hosts feasts, in an attempt to understand why they became established.

    This unique volume is the culmination of fifteen years of fieldwork among tribal groups in Southeast Asia. Until now no one has examined feasting as a general phenomenon in Southeast Asia or tried to synthesize its underlying dynamics from a theoretical perspective. The book will be of interest to cultural anthropologists, archaeologists, historians, and others involved in food studies.

  • About the Author(s)
    • Brian Hayden, Author

      Brian Hayden is professor emeritus of archaeology at Simon Fraser University. He is the author of The Power of Feasts: From Prehistory to the Present, Shamans Sorcerers and Saints: A Prehistory of Religion, and Archaeology: The Science of Once and Future Things.
  • Reviews and Endorsements
    • Serious comparative ethnographic studies are rare, and Brian Hayden has produced one of the very best. Feasting in Southeast Asia brings together an incredible wealth of detail based on original ethnographic research and careful reanalysis of previous ethnographies. It will be of great use to anyone interested in the material forces affecting sociopolitical variation in traditional societies.
      —Timothy Earle, professor emeritus, Northwestern University
    • This book is a must-have for scholars who are interested in comparative premodern political economies in Southeast Asia. It contributes to the study of feasting and its social, economic, political, and ideological elements in a way that neither ethnographic studies nor archaeological studies alone can accomplish. It will also appeal to a wider range of academics in the expanding interdisciplinary field of “food studies.”
      —Laura Junker, University of Illinois at Chicago
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