Foreword
Introduction
1 Food cycles and systems
2 Production and sourcing
3 Local and global foodways
4 Preparing and preserving
5 Gastronomic contexts and cultures
6 Religion and morality
7 Food choices and diets
8 Inspired by food
Catalogue
Comparative images
Bibliography
Acknowledgements
Index
Feast and Fast explores our evolving relationship with food with treasures from the Fitzwilliam Museum.
Victoria Avery is Keeper of Applied Arts at the
Fitzwilliam Museum. She has researched, lectured and published
extensively on many aspects of European sculpture and the
decorative arts. Her publications include Vulcan’s Forge in Venus’
City: The Story of Bronze in Venice, 1350-1650 (OUP, 2011; awarded
Premio Salimbeni, 2012); Treasured Possessions from the Renaissance
to the Enlightenment (PWP, 2015; co-edited with Melissa Calaresu
and Mary Laven) and Michelangelo Sculptor in Bronze (PWP, 2018;
editor and contributing author).
Melissa Calaresu is the Neil McKendrick Lecturer in History
at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge. She has written on the
cultural history of the Grand Tour, urban space, ice cream, and
street-vending in early modern Italy, with a particular focus on
Naples. She is co-editor of Exploring Cultural History: Essays in
Honour of Peter Burke (2010), New Approaches to Naples
c.1500–c.1800: The Power of Place (2013), and Food Hawkers: Selling
in the Street from Antiquity to the Present Day (2015). With
Victoria Avery and Mary Laven, she also co-edited Treasured
Possessions from the Renaissance to the Enlightenment (PWP, 2015),
which accompanied the Fitzwilliam Museum exhibition.
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