posted on 2015-08-24, 11:44authored byPenelope M. Allison
[FIrst paragraph] One of the main concerns of household archaeology are the activities that took place within
houses, particularly concerning food processing and food consumption. In the 1980s Richard
C. Wilk and William C. Rathje argued that archaeological evidence for domestic sites
provide the material evidence for households in the form of the dwelling, with its activity
areas and the possessions. They also argued that households were the locations from which
labour was pooled for production, including food production, and for the distribution of
resources (e.g. food) from producers to consumers, within or outside the household.
However, these arguments tend to present a household as a single unit rather than as systems
of membership where a number of people – e.g. biological family, extended family, servants,
slaves – might have lived together but have been involved in the preparation and
consumption of food in different ways and possibly in different parts of the site.
History
Citation
The Archaeology of Food: An Encyclopedia
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF ARTS, HUMANITIES AND LAW/School of Archaeology and Ancient History