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Awards
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Febe Armanios (Professor of History, Professor of History, Middlebury College) , Boğaç Ergene (Professor of History, Professor of History, University of Vermont)Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc Imprint: Oxford University Press Inc Dimensions: Width: 15.50cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 23.10cm Weight: 0.590kg ISBN: 9780190088408ISBN 10: 0190088400 Pages: 400 Publication Date: 22 June 2020 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsAcknowledgments Abbreviations Glossary A Note on Transliteration Introduction Chapter 1. Rules Chapter 2. Meat Chapter 3. Slaughter Chapter 4. Intoxicants Chapter 5. Business Chapter 6. Standards Chapter 7. Manufactured Products Chapter 8. Wholesome Chapter 9. Cuisine Chapter 10. Eating Out Conclusion Appendices Notes Bibliography IndexReviewsAn excellent overview of halal food.... The authors have set a new standard for thoughtful, clear, and constructive scholarship on this important and relevant topic... .A seminal work that is appropriate both for academics and for students ... [that] will also be of interest to companies seeking halal certification ... [and] to state, as well as nonstate, halal certification bodies and policymakers. * Johan Fischer, Bustan: The Middle East Book Review * An excellent overview of halal that is largely missing in the current discourse and makes an excellent addition to food studies collections. * Choice * A timely, comprehensive, and thoroughly researched information on all things halal... .The book is scholarly in its depth and sources but easy to understand in its straightforward writing style. Though billed as a history, it is also an invaluable guide for anyone who wants to follow-or know more about-increasingly complex halal traditions, which changed as Islam spread and encountered new cuisines....Armanios and Ergene's Halal Food: A History is a major addition to food studies, historic as well as contemporary. * Foreword Reviews * An understanding of the ideation of halal is probably not something picked up at Halal Guys or some other street-food vendor... .This new book by a couple of American scholars covers the subject broadly, beyond just food - the term applies to anything that is lawful or legitimate under Islamic law. The authors address slaughtering methods, ingredients in processed foods, alcohol, the global food trade (halal chickens from Brazil are shipped to the Middle East), food in public settings like schools, the growth in certifying agencies, and how it all relates to the Quran. * Florence Fabricant, New York Times * In this lively, engaging, and rigorously researched book, Febe Armanios and Bogac Ergene consider how Muslims have historically understood 'halal' * meaning what is permissible according to Islamic law and custom, especially in food * Halal Food admirably fills a lacuna in our understanding of the concepts of halal (permitted) and haram (forbidden) foods in Islamic law. Its breadth ranges wide and deep into the politico-cultural and economic implications of halal food for the world's Muslims. It is rigorous and comprehensive and delightfully readable by the non-scholar and fascinating for the non-Muslim. * Clifford A. Wright, author of A Mediterranean Feast * We have waited a long time for a book that approaches halal food with breadth and depth, and Armanios and Ergene masterfully and creatively deliver both. This is the first book that not only introduces readers to all the dimensions of halal food but also delves into its finer distinctions. It speaks to both newcomers to the field and experts alike * a very impressive achievement. * A lucid, judicious survey of the foods deemed halal (permissible) in the Islamic tradition ranging from the original religious texts to adaptations to contemporary business, gastronomic, and government involvement in different parts of the globe. Timely and much needed. * Rachel Laudan, author of Cuisine and Empire: Cooking in World History * An informative starting place for...renewed interested in food studies in the Islamic world.... The authors' focus on the present-day 'halal revolution' is the overarching strength of this book.... Halal Food: A History combines exegesis and economics in order to deliver a fresh take on Muslim politics in the modem world. * Stacy E. Holden, American Historical Review * An excellent overview of halal food.... The authors have set a new standard for thoughtful, clear, and constructive scholarship on this important and relevant topic... .A seminal work that is appropriate both for academics and for students ... [that] will also be of interest to companies seeking halal certification ... [and] to state, as well as nonstate, halal certification bodies and policymakers. * Johan Fischer, Bustan: The Middle East Book Review * An excellent overview of halal that is largely missing in the current discourse and makes an excellent addition to food studies collections. * Choice * A timely, comprehensive, and thoroughly researched information on all things halal... .The book is scholarly in its depth and sources but easy to understand in its straightforward writing style. Though billed as a history, it is also an invaluable guide for anyone who wants to follow-or know more about-increasingly complex halal traditions, which changed as Islam spread and encountered new cuisines....Armanios and Ergene's Halal Food: A History is a major addition to food studies, historic as well as contemporary. * Foreword Reviews * An understanding of the ideation of halal is probably not something picked up at Halal Guys or some other street-food vendor... .This new book by a couple of American scholars covers the subject broadly, beyond just food - the term applies to anything that is lawful or legitimate under Islamic law. The authors address slaughtering methods, ingredients in processed foods, alcohol, the global food trade (halal chickens from Brazil are shipped to the Middle East), food in public settings like schools, the growth in certifying agencies, and how it all relates to the Quran. * Florence Fabricant, New York Times * In this lively, engaging, and rigorously researched book, Febe Armanios and Bogac Ergene consider how Muslims have historically understood 'halal' * meaning what is permissible according to Islamic law and custom, especially in food * Halal Food admirably fills a lacuna in our understanding of the concepts of halal (permitted) and haram (forbidden) foods in Islamic law. Its breadth ranges wide and deep into the politico-cultural and economic implications of halal food for the world's Muslims. It is rigorous and comprehensive and delightfully readable by the non-scholar and fascinating for the non-Muslim. * Clifford A. Wright, author of A Mediterranean Feast * We have waited a long time for a book that approaches halal food with breadth and depth, and Armanios and Ergene masterfully and creatively deliver both. This is the first book that not only introduces readers to all the dimensions of halal food but also delves into its finer distinctions. It speaks to both newcomers to the field and experts alike * a very impressive achievement. * A lucid, judicious survey of the foods deemed halal (permissible) in the Islamic tradition ranging from the original religious texts to adaptations to contemporary business, gastronomic, and government involvement in different parts of the globe. Timely and much needed. * Rachel Laudan, author of Cuisine and Empire: Cooking in World History * An excellent overview of halal food ... The authors have set a new standard for thoughtful, clear, and constructive scholarship on this important and relevant topic ... A seminal work that is appropriate both for academics and for students ... [that] will also be of interest to companies seeking halal certification ... [and] to state, as well as nonstate, halal certification bodies and policymakers. * Johan Fischer, Bustan: The Middle East Book Review * An excellent overview of halal that is largely missing in the current discourse and makes an excellent addition to food studies collections. * Choice * A timely, comprehensive, and thoroughly researched information on all things halal...The book is scholarly in its depth and sources but easy to understand in its straightforward writing style. Though billed as a history, it is also an invaluable guide for anyone who wants to follow-or know more about-increasingly complex halal traditions, which changed as Islam spread and encountered new cuisines...Armanios and Ergene's Halal Food: A History is a major addition to food studies, historic as well as contemporary. * Foreword Reviews * An understanding of the ideation of halal is probably not something picked up at Halal Guys or some other street-food vendor...This new book by a couple of American scholars covers the subject broadly, beyond just food - the term applies to anything that is lawful or legitimate under Islamic law. The authors address slaughtering methods, ingredients in processed foods, alcohol, the global food trade (halal chickens from Brazil are shipped to the Middle East), food in public settings like schools, the growth in certifying agencies, and how it all relates to the Quran. * Florence Fabricant, New York Times * In this lively, engaging, and rigorously researched book, Febe Armanios and Bogac Ergene consider how Muslims have historically understood 'halal' * meaning what is permissible according to Islamic law and custom, especially in food * Halal Food admirably fills a lacuna in our understanding of the concepts of halal (permitted) and haram (forbidden) foods in Islamic law. Its breadth ranges wide and deep into the politico-cultural and economic implications of halal food for the world's Muslims. It is rigorous and comprehensive and delightfully readable by the non-scholar and fascinating for the non-Muslim. * Clifford A. Wright, author of A Mediterranean Feast * We have waited a long time for a book that approaches halal food with breadth and depth, and Armanios and Ergene masterfully and creatively deliver both. This is the first book that not only introduces readers to all the dimensions of halal food but also delves into its finer distinctions. It speaks to both newcomers to the field and experts alike * a very impressive achievement. * A lucid, judicious survey of the foods deemed halal (permissible) in the Islamic tradition ranging from the original religious texts to adaptations to contemporary business, gastronomic, and government involvement in different parts of the globe. Timely and much needed. * Rachel Laudan, author of Cuisine and Empire: Cooking in World History * An excellent overview of halal food ... The authors have set a new standard for thoughtful, clear, and constructive scholarship on this important and relevant topic ... A seminal work that is appropriate both for academics and for students ... [that] will also be of interest to companies seeking halal certification ... [and] to state, as well as nonstate, halal certification bodies and policymakers. * Johan Fischer, Bustan: The Middle East Book Review * An excellent overview of halal that is largely missing in the current discourse and makes an excellent addition to food studies collections. * Choice * A timely, comprehensive, and thoroughly researched information on all things halal...The book is scholarly in its depth and sources but easy to understand in its straightforward writing style. Though billed as a history, it is also an invaluable guide for anyone who wants to follow-or know more about-increasingly complex halal traditions, which changed as Islam spread and encountered new cuisines...Armanios and Ergene's Halal Food: A History is a major addition to food studies, historic as well as contemporary. * Foreword Reviews * An understanding of the ideation of halal is probably not something picked up at Halal Guys or some other street-food vendor...This new book by a couple of American scholars covers the subject broadly, beyond just food - the term applies to anything that is lawful or legitimate under Islamic law. The authors address slaughtering methods, ingredients in processed foods, alcohol, the global food trade (halal chickens from Brazil are shipped to the Middle East), food in public settings like schools, the growth in certifying agencies, and how it all relates to the Quran. * Florence Fabricant, New York Times * In this lively, engaging, and rigorously researched book, Febe Armanios and Bogac Ergene consider how Muslims have historically understood 'halal' * meaning what is permissible according to Islamic law and custom, especially in food * Halal Food admirably fills a lacuna in our understanding of the concepts of halal (permitted) and haram (forbidden) foods in Islamic law. Its breadth ranges wide and deep into the politico-cultural and economic implications of halal food for the world's Muslims. It is rigorous and comprehensive and delightfully readable by the non-scholar and fascinating for the non-Muslim. * Clifford A. Wright, author of A Mediterranean Feast * We have waited a long time for a book that approaches halal food with breadth and depth, and Armanios and Ergene masterfully and creatively deliver both. This is the first book that not only introduces readers to all the dimensions of halal food but also delves into its finer distinctions. It speaks to both newcomers to the field and experts alike * a very impressive achievement. * A lucid, judicious survey of the foods deemed halal (permissible) in the Islamic tradition ranging from the original religious texts to adaptations to contemporary business, gastronomic, and government involvement in different parts of the globe. Timely and much needed. * Rachel Laudan, author of Cuisine and Empire: Cooking in World History * Author InformationFebe Armanios is Professor of History at Middlebury College and the author of Coptic Christianity in Ottoman Egypt (OUP, 2011). Bogac Ergene is Professor of History at the University of Vermont. He is the author of Local Court, Provincial Society and Justice in the Ottoman Empire and co-author of The Economics of Ottoman Justice. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |