01329nam2-2200421---450-99000614030020331620160421085050.084-7100-478-X000614030USA01000614030(ALEPH)000614030USA0100061403020160111d1992----km-y0itay50------baspaES||||||||001yyAragón y AméricaFrancisco Asíncon la colaboración de Tomás Buesa Oliver y Juan José Andreu OcarizMadridEditorial Mapfre1992275 p.ill.23 cmColecciones Mapfre 1492. Las Espanas y America5001000614019Colecciones Mapfre 1492. Las Espanas y America, 520010012001AragonaRelazioni [con l'] America Latina946.55ASÍN,Francisco503918ANDREU OCARIZ,Juan JoséBUESA OLIVER,TomasITsalbcISBD990006140300203316VI.7.COLL.20/ 5104 ISLABKUMAMARANO9020160414USA011107MARANO9020160414USA011112MARANO9020160421USA010850Aragón y América1386047UNISA03897nam 22007335 450 991038382050332120230810233903.0981-15-1765-710.1007/978-981-15-1765-5(CKB)4100000010661830(DE-He213)978-981-15-1765-5(MiAaPQ)EBC6135164(PPN)243223889(EXLCZ)99410000001066183020200316d2020 u| 0engurnn|008mamaatxtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierMilk Culture in Eurasia Constructing a Hypothesis of Monogenesis–Bipolarization /by Masahiro Hirata1st ed. 2020.Singapore :Springer Nature Singapore :Imprint: Springer,2020.1 online resource (XXVI, 350 p. 279 illus., 129 illus. in color.) Springer Geography,2194-3168981-15-1764-9 Milk Culture and Pastoralism -- Milk Culture of West Asia -- Milk Culture of South Asia -- Milk Culture of North Asia -- Milk Culture of Central Asia -- Milk Culture of the Tibetan Plateau -- Milk Culture in Europe and the Caucasus -- The Monogenesis-Bipolarization Hypothesis of Eurasian Milk Culture -- Milk Processing Systems and Processes: A Reconsideration of Nakao’s Analytical Model -- From Milk Culture to Pastoralism Theory.The invention of milking and milk use created a new mode of subsistence called pastoralism. On rangelands across Eurasia, pastoralists subsist by extensive animal husbandry and by processing their animals’ milk. Based on the author’s fieldwork over more than two decades, this book details the processing systems and uses of milk observed in pastoralist and farm households in West Asia, South Asia, North Asia, Central Asia, the Tibetan Plateau, and Europe and the Caucasus. Milk culture in each region is characterized by its processing technology and use of milk, and characteristics common to wider geographical spheres are identified. Inclusion of case studies from the literature expands the continent-wide perspective and provides further indications of how milk culture developed and diffused historically. The inferences drawn are expressed in the author’s monogenesis­–bipolarization hypothesis of Eurasian milk culture, that milking and milk processing had a single center of origin in West Asia, and that the technology involved the spread from there across the continent, developing distinct characteristics in northern and southern spheres. Finally, because milk culture underpins pastoralism as a mode of subsistence, the typology and theory of pastoralism are re-examined from the standpoint of milk culture.Springer Geography,2194-3168Human geographyCultural geographyEthnologyAsiaCultureEthnologyEuropeAgricultureNutritionSocial and Cultural GeographyHuman GeographyAsian CultureEuropean CultureAgricultureNutritionHuman geography.Cultural geography.EthnologyCulture.EthnologyAgriculture.Nutrition.Social and Cultural Geography.Human Geography.Asian Culture.European Culture.Agriculture.Nutrition.599.95Hirata Masahiroauthttp://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/aut879650MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910383820503321Milk Culture in Eurasia1964401UNINA