edited by Christine M. Du Bois, Chee-Beng Tan and Sidney Mintz contributions by Akiko Moriya, Can Van Nguyen, Donald Z. Osborn, Erino Ozeki, Myra Sidharta, Ivan Sergio Freire De Sousa, Chee-Beng Tan, Rita de Cássia Milagres Teixeira Vieira, Katarzyna J. Cwiertka, Christine M. Du Bois, H T Huang, Lawrence Kaplan, Jian-Hua Mao and Sidney Mintz
University of Illinois Press, 2007 Cloth: 978-0-252-03341-4 | eISBN: 978-0-252-09549-8 Library of Congress Classification TX558.S7W67 2008 Dewey Decimal Classification 641.35655
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC
ABOUT THIS BOOK
As the most ecologically efficient and economical source of complete protein in human food, soy is gradually attracting more use in the American diet for its nutritional and financial value. Derived from soybean plants--the leading export crop of the United States and the world's most traded crop--soy produced for human consumption is part of a global enterprise affecting the likes of farmers, economists, dieticians, and grocery shoppers. An international group of expert food specialists--including an agricultural economist, an agricultural sociologist, a former Peace Corps development expert, and numerous food anthropologists and agricultural historians--discusses important issues central to soy production and consumption: genetically engineered soybeans, increasing soybean cultivation, soyfood marketing techniques, the use of soybeans as an important soil restorative, and the rendering of soybeans for human consumption.
Contributors are Katarzyna Cwiertka, Christine M. Du Bois, H. T. Huang, Lawrence Kaplan, Jian-Hua Mao, Sidney W. Mintz, Akiko Moriya, Can Van Nguyen, Donald Z. Osborn, Erino Ozeki, Myra Sidharta, Ivan Sergio Freire de Sousa, Chee-Beng Tan, and Rita de Cássia Milagres Teixeira Vieira.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY Christine M. Du Bois is a manager for the Johns Hopkins Project on Soybeans and the author of Images of West Indian Immigrants in Mass Media: The Struggle for a Positive Ethnic Reputation.Chee-Beng Tan is head of anthropology at the Chinese University of Hong Kong and the author of Chinese Overseas: Comparative Cultural Issues.Sidney Mintz is the William L. Straus Jr. Professor Emeritus and a research professor of anthropology at the Johns Hopkins University and the author of Tasting Food, Tasting Freedom.
REVIEWS
“The World of Soy escorts readers on an unexpected but delightfully fascinating journey through the subject of soy as a food. . . . Recommended.”--Choice
"Du Bois, Tan, and Mintz have done an excellent job combining a series of chapters from diverse authors into a seamless read. The World of Soy provides an informative account of a legume equally ancient and modern."--Science
“Measured in cash terms, soy (Glycine max) is in some ways the most important crop, and in terms of imports and exports, second only to wheat. The fact that this important book has contributions by seventeen authors reflects more than the circumstances of its origins in a couple of academic conferences; it also shows the vastness of the topic and the large number of disciplines required to make sense of it. . . . [This] exemplary, comprehensive volume shows the way to frame the crucial questions of food studies. “--Times Literary Supplement
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Acknowledgments vii
Introduction: The Significance of Soy 1 Sidney W. Mintz, Chee-Beng Tan, and Christine M. Du Bois Section One: Acceptance of Soy in Global and Historical Context
1. Legumes in the History of Human Nutrition 27 Lawrence Kaplan
2. Early Uses of Soybean in Chinese History 45 H. T. Huang
3. Fermented Beans and Western Taste 56 Sidney W. Mintz
4. Genetically Engineered Soy 74 Christine M. Du Bois and Ivan Sergio Freire de Sousa
Section Two: Ethnographic Studies of Soy's Acceptance
5. Tofu and Related Products in Chinese Foodways 99 Chee-Beng Tan
6. Tofu Feasts in Sichuan Cuisine 121 Jianhua Mao
7. Fermented Soybean Products and Japanese Standard Taste 144 Erino Ozeki
8. Fermented Soyfoods in South Korea: The Industrialization of Tradition 161 Katarzyna J. Cwiertka and Akiko Moriya
9. Tofu in Vietnamese Life 182 Can Van Nguyen
10. Soyfoods in Indonesia 195 Myra Sidharta
11. Social Context and Diet: Changing Soy Production and Consumption in the United States 208 Christine M. Du Bois
12. Soybeans and Soyfoods in Brazil, with Notes on Argentina: Sketch of an Expanding World Commodity 234 Ivan Sergio Freire de Sousa and Rita de Cassia Milagres Teixeira Vieira
13. Soy in Bangladesh: History and Prospects 257 Christine M. Du Bois
14. Soybeans and Soybean Products in West Africa: Adoption by Farmers and Adaptation to Foodways 276 Donald Z. Osborn
Conclusion: Soy's Dominance and Destiny 299 Christine M. Du Bois and SIdney W. Mintz
Appendix A. Scientific Names for Plants and Edible Fungi 315
Appendix B. More on Tofu in Chengdu 320
Contributors 325
Index 329
edited by Christine M. Du Bois, Chee-Beng Tan and Sidney Mintz contributions by Akiko Moriya, Can Van Nguyen, Donald Z. Osborn, Erino Ozeki, Myra Sidharta, Ivan Sergio Freire De Sousa, Chee-Beng Tan, Rita de Cássia Milagres Teixeira Vieira, Katarzyna J. Cwiertka, Christine M. Du Bois, H T Huang, Lawrence Kaplan, Jian-Hua Mao and Sidney Mintz
University of Illinois Press, 2007 Cloth: 978-0-252-03341-4 eISBN: 978-0-252-09549-8
As the most ecologically efficient and economical source of complete protein in human food, soy is gradually attracting more use in the American diet for its nutritional and financial value. Derived from soybean plants--the leading export crop of the United States and the world's most traded crop--soy produced for human consumption is part of a global enterprise affecting the likes of farmers, economists, dieticians, and grocery shoppers. An international group of expert food specialists--including an agricultural economist, an agricultural sociologist, a former Peace Corps development expert, and numerous food anthropologists and agricultural historians--discusses important issues central to soy production and consumption: genetically engineered soybeans, increasing soybean cultivation, soyfood marketing techniques, the use of soybeans as an important soil restorative, and the rendering of soybeans for human consumption.
Contributors are Katarzyna Cwiertka, Christine M. Du Bois, H. T. Huang, Lawrence Kaplan, Jian-Hua Mao, Sidney W. Mintz, Akiko Moriya, Can Van Nguyen, Donald Z. Osborn, Erino Ozeki, Myra Sidharta, Ivan Sergio Freire de Sousa, Chee-Beng Tan, and Rita de Cássia Milagres Teixeira Vieira.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY Christine M. Du Bois is a manager for the Johns Hopkins Project on Soybeans and the author of Images of West Indian Immigrants in Mass Media: The Struggle for a Positive Ethnic Reputation.Chee-Beng Tan is head of anthropology at the Chinese University of Hong Kong and the author of Chinese Overseas: Comparative Cultural Issues.Sidney Mintz is the William L. Straus Jr. Professor Emeritus and a research professor of anthropology at the Johns Hopkins University and the author of Tasting Food, Tasting Freedom.
REVIEWS
“The World of Soy escorts readers on an unexpected but delightfully fascinating journey through the subject of soy as a food. . . . Recommended.”--Choice
"Du Bois, Tan, and Mintz have done an excellent job combining a series of chapters from diverse authors into a seamless read. The World of Soy provides an informative account of a legume equally ancient and modern."--Science
“Measured in cash terms, soy (Glycine max) is in some ways the most important crop, and in terms of imports and exports, second only to wheat. The fact that this important book has contributions by seventeen authors reflects more than the circumstances of its origins in a couple of academic conferences; it also shows the vastness of the topic and the large number of disciplines required to make sense of it. . . . [This] exemplary, comprehensive volume shows the way to frame the crucial questions of food studies. “--Times Literary Supplement
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Acknowledgments vii
Introduction: The Significance of Soy 1 Sidney W. Mintz, Chee-Beng Tan, and Christine M. Du Bois Section One: Acceptance of Soy in Global and Historical Context
1. Legumes in the History of Human Nutrition 27 Lawrence Kaplan
2. Early Uses of Soybean in Chinese History 45 H. T. Huang
3. Fermented Beans and Western Taste 56 Sidney W. Mintz
4. Genetically Engineered Soy 74 Christine M. Du Bois and Ivan Sergio Freire de Sousa
Section Two: Ethnographic Studies of Soy's Acceptance
5. Tofu and Related Products in Chinese Foodways 99 Chee-Beng Tan
6. Tofu Feasts in Sichuan Cuisine 121 Jianhua Mao
7. Fermented Soybean Products and Japanese Standard Taste 144 Erino Ozeki
8. Fermented Soyfoods in South Korea: The Industrialization of Tradition 161 Katarzyna J. Cwiertka and Akiko Moriya
9. Tofu in Vietnamese Life 182 Can Van Nguyen
10. Soyfoods in Indonesia 195 Myra Sidharta
11. Social Context and Diet: Changing Soy Production and Consumption in the United States 208 Christine M. Du Bois
12. Soybeans and Soyfoods in Brazil, with Notes on Argentina: Sketch of an Expanding World Commodity 234 Ivan Sergio Freire de Sousa and Rita de Cassia Milagres Teixeira Vieira
13. Soy in Bangladesh: History and Prospects 257 Christine M. Du Bois
14. Soybeans and Soybean Products in West Africa: Adoption by Farmers and Adaptation to Foodways 276 Donald Z. Osborn
Conclusion: Soy's Dominance and Destiny 299 Christine M. Du Bois and SIdney W. Mintz
Appendix A. Scientific Names for Plants and Edible Fungi 315
Appendix B. More on Tofu in Chengdu 320
Contributors 325
Index 329
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC