Recent historiography has demonstrated the immense material and metaphorical importance of food to representing social distinction in medieval and early modern Europe. To date there has been no effort to explore the Irish experience in this context. This article approaches the “meaning” of food in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Ireland through a focused gastro-political analysis of Irish literary and material satire. It will examine representations of low-born food consumption in relation to broader early modern discourse around dietary classification, manners and food consumption. It will also explore the basis of Irish social food stereotypes by locating them in contemporary nutritional theories, philosophical and “scientific” ideas a...
Diet and identity in early modern dietaries and Shakespeare: the inflections of nationality, gender,...
Most Irish people likely have little or no knowledge of the richness and variety of their ancestor’s...
Drawing on evidence from across a range of disciplines (literature, folklore, history, sociology, et...
This research note introduces the methodology of the FoodCult Project, with the aim of stimulating d...
Studying the food practices of one vast and prominent Irish household reveals a complex history of c...
This research note introduces the methodology of the FoodCult Project, with the aim of stimulating d...
This paper will introduce an interdisciplinary research project that is seeking to understand the na...
From medieval Western Europe to the early modern Spanish Americas and Asia, scholarship dealing with...
Beer was a staple of early modern diets across northern Europe and the Atlantic World. While its pro...
This thesis examines the assimilation and application of humoral medical knowledge in early modern I...
This first major book on consumption in eighteenth-century Ireland takes its lead from Brewer, McKen...
This thesis argues that Irish consumption underwent major changes over the course of the sixteenth c...
This study tracks changes in how an identifiably Irish distilled liquor flowed through society in ea...
Archaeological studies of food have generally taken an isolationist approach: animal bones and plant...
In his 2016 book “Early Irish Farming”, Kelly notes that we are blessed with a large amount of infor...
Diet and identity in early modern dietaries and Shakespeare: the inflections of nationality, gender,...
Most Irish people likely have little or no knowledge of the richness and variety of their ancestor’s...
Drawing on evidence from across a range of disciplines (literature, folklore, history, sociology, et...
This research note introduces the methodology of the FoodCult Project, with the aim of stimulating d...
Studying the food practices of one vast and prominent Irish household reveals a complex history of c...
This research note introduces the methodology of the FoodCult Project, with the aim of stimulating d...
This paper will introduce an interdisciplinary research project that is seeking to understand the na...
From medieval Western Europe to the early modern Spanish Americas and Asia, scholarship dealing with...
Beer was a staple of early modern diets across northern Europe and the Atlantic World. While its pro...
This thesis examines the assimilation and application of humoral medical knowledge in early modern I...
This first major book on consumption in eighteenth-century Ireland takes its lead from Brewer, McKen...
This thesis argues that Irish consumption underwent major changes over the course of the sixteenth c...
This study tracks changes in how an identifiably Irish distilled liquor flowed through society in ea...
Archaeological studies of food have generally taken an isolationist approach: animal bones and plant...
In his 2016 book “Early Irish Farming”, Kelly notes that we are blessed with a large amount of infor...
Diet and identity in early modern dietaries and Shakespeare: the inflections of nationality, gender,...
Most Irish people likely have little or no knowledge of the richness and variety of their ancestor’s...
Drawing on evidence from across a range of disciplines (literature, folklore, history, sociology, et...