Alcohol use has a long and ubiquitous history. The prevailing tendency to view alcohol merely as a 'social problem' or the popular notion that alcohol only serves to provide us with a 'hedonic' high, masks its importance in the social fabric of many human societies both past and present. To understand alcohol use, as a complex social practice that has been exploited by humans for thousands of years, requires cross-disciplinary insight from social/cultural anthropologists, archaeologists, historians, psychologists, primatologists, and biologists.
This multi-disciplinary volume examines the broad use of alcohol in the human lineage and its wider relationship to social contexts such as feasting, sacred rituals, and social bonding. Alcohol abuse is a small part of a much more complex and social pattern of widespread alcohol use by humans. This alone should prompt us to explore the evolutionary origins of this ancient practice and the socially functional reasons for its continued popularity. The objectives of Alcohol and Humans are: (1) to understand how and why nonhuman primates and other animals use alcohol in the wild, and its relevance to understanding the social consumption of alcohol in humans; (2) to understand the social function of alcohol in human prehistory; (3) to understand the sociocultural significance of alcohol across human societies; and (4) to explore the social functions of alcohol consumption in contemporary society.
Alcohol in Humans will be fascinating reading for those in the fields of biology, psychology, anthropology, archaeology, as well as those with a broader interest in addiction.
1: The puzzle of alcohol consumption, Robin Dunbar and Kimberley Hockings
2: The natural biology of dietary ethanol, and its implications for primate evolution, Robert Dudley
3: Hominoid Ancestry and the Adaptation to Dietary Ethanol, Matthew Carrigan
4: The Importance of Raffia Palm Wine to Coexisting Humans and Chimpanzees, Kimberley Hockings, Miho Ito and Gen Yamakoshi
5: The earliest toasts: archaeological evidence of the social and cultural construction of alcohol in prehistoric Europe, Elisa Guerra-Doce
6: Uncorking the past: alcoholic fermentation as humankind's first biotechnology, Patrick McGovern
7: Rituals and feasting as incentives for cooperative action at early Neolithic Göbekli Tepe, Oliver Dietrich and Laura Dietrich
8: Alcohol as embodied material culture: anthropological reflections on the deep entanglement of humans and alcohol, Michael Dietler
9: The nature of sweetness: an indigenous fermentation complex in Amazonian Guyana, Lewis Daly
10: Chicha as Water: Traditional Fermented Beer Consumption Among Forager Horticulturalists in the Bolivian Amazon, Asher Rosinger and Hilary Bethancourt
11: Feasting and its Role in Human Community Formation, Robin Dunbar
12: Through the drinking glass: a long history of pints and performative materialities in England, Angela McShane
13: Alcohol and humans: reflections and prospects, Kimberley Hockings and Robin Dunbar
Kimberley Hockings is a lecturer in Conservation Science at the Centre of Ecology and Conservation at the University of Exeter. Her research examines the ways in which human and nonhuman great apes coexist in shared landscapes, including in their overlapping use of resources such as fermented beverages. From this she has developed an interest in the evolutionary origins of ethanol consumption in humans. To effectively understand human and wildlife components of interactions her research increasingly combines biological, ecological, and social science approaches. She conducts fieldwork in Guinea and Guinea-Bissau, west Africa, and is a member of the Great Ape Section of the IUCN/SSC Primate Specialist Group.
Robin Dunbar is Professor of Evolutionary Psychology at the University of Oxford, and Emeritus Fellow of Magdalen College. He was elected a Fellow of the British Academy in 1998. His principal research interests focus on the evolution of sociality (with particular reference to primates and humans). He is best known for the social brain hypothesis, the gossip theory of language evolution and Dunbar's Number (the limit on the number of relationships that we can manage). He has published 30 books and edited volumes and over 300 journal articles.
Contributors:
- Hilary J. Bethancourt
- Matthew Carrigan
- Lewis Daly
- Michael Dietler
- Oliver Dietrich
- Laura Dietrich
- Robert Dudley
- Robin I.M. Dunbar
- Elisa Guerra-Doce
- Kimberley Hockings
- Miho Ito
- Patrick McGovern
- Angela McShane
- Asha Y. Rosinger
- Gen Yamakoshi