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Archaeologies of Food in Australia

Archaeologies of Food in Australia

Madeline Shanahan

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Format: paperback

ISBN: 9781761540493

Publication: 01 Nov 2025
Series: Tom Austen Brown Studies in Australasian Archaeology
Publisher: լе

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Twenty-first century Australia is a nation somewhat obsessed with food. From cookbooks to television screens, we are surrounded by conversations about what and how we eat. This fixation highlights the fact that food is, and always has been, a central component of human culture – especially in a diverse nation like Australia.

In recent years, this contemporary food focus has increasingly looked to the past for answers relating to health and sustainable practices. While historians in Australia have contributed extensively to these discussions, there has been surprisingly little input from archaeologists. This is even more surprising when we consider that so much of what archaeologists excavate – such as faunal remains, ceramics and cesspits – can collectively tell the story of food culture when drawn together and considered as a whole.

To open up this dialogue, Archaeologies of Food in Australia addresses the archaeology of food from deep time to the recent past. It showcases the many varied approaches to the study of food in Australia, from the archaeological sciences (such as zooarchaeology and archaeobotanical analysis) through to discussions of historic kitchens and cookery.

Archaeologies of Food in Australia spans diverse cultural groups, including First Nations peoples, European migrants and Chinese diaspora communities, and examines evidence across millennia. Contributors demonstrate the breadth and richness of archaeological food research currently undertaken in Australia, and in doing so, they address critical questions about diet, cookery, dining and food culture.

In this collection, eight food stories from Australia’s past have been selected to help open the door to many more readers, and to many more questions. The great depth of time and diversity in Australian archaeology, when coupled with the broad range of skills in the discipline, presents enormous potential for further research.


Dr Madeline Shanahan is a historical archaeologist with twenty years’ professional experience across research and heritage consulting. She completed her PhD at University College Dublin and is the author of two books and a range of peer-reviewed papers addressing food and colonisation, recipe writing, and ritual.

Introduction: Food for thought by Madeline Shanahan

  1. Aboriginal traditions of food: Investigating Holocene dietary changes in southern Australia by Tim Owen
  2. Aboriginal plant use and ecological knowledge: 47,000 years of monsoon rainforest connections in the Kimberley, north-west Australia by India Ella Dilkes-Hall, June Davis and Helen Malo
  3. There were plenty of fish in the sea: The archaeology of fish consumption in Australia by Morgan C.F. Disspain, Tiina Manne and Ariana B.J. Lambrides
  4. Tell me what you eat and I will tell you who you are: The socio-environmental impacts of European animal domesticates in colonial Australia by Tanja Nussbaumer and Melanie Fillios
  5. “Suitable food for old and worn out people …”: Archaeological evidence of institutional foodways in Australia by Kimberley G. Connor
  6. Pigs, temples and feasts: Australian Chinese pig ovens by Gordon Grimwade
  7. Baked, boiled, roasted, steamed and stewed: Kitchens and cooking appliances as artefacts of domestic life in colonial Australia by Jacqueline Newling
  8. Food in bottles: What they can tell us by Dr E. Jeanne Harris, Bronwyn Woof and Peter O’Donohue

Conclusion by Madeline Shanahan

Index

Format: paperback
Size: 254 x 178 mm
ISBN: 9781761540493
Publication: 01 Nov 2025
Series: Tom Austen Brown Studies in Australasian Archaeology