Roman Dining: A Special Issue of American Journal of Philology

Front Cover
Barbara K. Gold, John F. Donahue
JHU Press, Jun 17, 2005 - Cooking - 140 pages

This special issue of the American Journal of Philology illuminates the nature and function of food and dining in the Roman world, offering historical, sociological, literary, cultural, and material perspectives.

The articles collected here explore topics from diverse fields to analyze Roman culture and material practice, including the dietary practices and nutritional concerns of the Romans, dining and its links to ideology during the early imperial period, public banqueting and its social function in Roman society, and the emphasis placed on the waiting servant in both domestic and funerary settings.

The American Journal of Philology is renowned for its role in helping to shape American classical scholarship. Today the Journal has achieved worldwide recognition as a forum for international exchange among classicists by publishing original research in Greco-Roman literature, and culture.

 

Contents

JOHN WILKINS
28
MATTHEW ROLLER
49
JOHN F DONAHUE
95
D DUNBABIN
115
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References to this book

Food in the Ancient World
Joan P. Alcock
No preview available - 2006

About the author (2005)

John F. Donahue is an assistant professor in the department of classical studies at the College of William and Mary.

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