Publication details

Sharing meal within a Chinese family

Authors

OLIVOVÁ Lucie

Year of publication 2021
Type Appeared in Conference without Proceedings
Citation
Description The importance of food in Chinese society is generally acknowledged. It is far from being just a basic necessity of everyday life; as is well known, food is primarily a social phenomenon in China, and items of food are offered in rituals, too. The Chinese pride themselves on the complexity of their victuals, and on their sophisticated dining habits. They regard the sharing of dishes during a meal as a valid proof of being community oriented. However, these notions are only valid of banquets during festive occasions. Meals consumed on everyday basis are understandably less formal. Regarded from this perspective, it is certainly intriguing that the traditional house did not have a specific dining-room, that a large solid dining table was not a typical piece of domestic furniture, and that members of an extended family did not usually eat together. In my paper, I shall try to describe some habits which detract from the generally accepted views on dining in Chinese society. I shall also point out what role they could have played in the shaping of family relations.

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