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HomeResearchBooksJamaican Food: History, Biology, Culture
Jamaican Food: History, Biology, Culture
Jamaican Food: History, Biology, Culture
Author/editor: Professor Barry Higman
Publisher: University of West Indies Press
Year published: 2008

Abstract

 B.W. Higman

 

The historical study of food and the anthropology of food are recent and growing fields of scholarly inquiry. An understanding of these aspects of life can reveal much about a culture's crop production, economy, preparation methods, festivals, foodways, history, and environmental care and degradation. This beautifully illustrated book by one of the Caribbean's pre-eminent historians, B.W. Higman, sheds new light on food and cultural practices in Jamaica from the time of the earliest Taino inhabitants through the introduction of different foodways by enslaved peoples, to creole adaptations to the fast-food phenomena of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. The author examines the shift in Jamaican food practices over time, from the Tainos' use of bitter cassava to the Maroons' introduction of jerk pork, and the population's love affair with the fruits of the island such as pawpaw, guava, star apple, and avocado pear. In this accessible study, the author traces how endemic animals, delicacies such as the turtle, ringtail pigeon, black land crab and mountain mullet, barely retained their popular status into the early twentieth century and are now almost completely forgotten, their populations dramatically depleted, often endangered.