1.3 Concept and Methodology of Field Research into Milk Processing Technology
Chapter 2 Milk Culture of West Asia
2.1 The Milk Processing System of Baqqaara Arab Pastoralists in Northeast Syria
2.2 Milk Processing Systems in Southern Iran: Milk Culture Shared Across Ethnic Boundaries
2.3 Milk Culture in West Asia
Chapter 3 Milk Culture of South Asia
3.1 Changes Impacting Milk Production in the Modern Era
3.2 Urban and Rural Milk Products and Processing Techniques in Western India
3.3 Milk Processing System of Pastoralists in Western India
3.4 Features and Background of the Milk Processing System of Western India
Chapter 4 Milk Culture of North Asia
4.1 Milk Processing Systems of Mongolian Nomads in Central Mongolia
4.2 Milk Processing Systems in the East of Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region
4.3 Regional Diversity of Milk Processing Systems in North Asia
Chapter 5 Milk Culture of Central Asia
5.1 Milk Processing Systems of Khazakh Pastoralists in Khazakhstan
5.2 Milk Processing Systems of Turkic Pastoralists in Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region
5.3 Milk Culture of Central Asia
Chapter 6 Milk Culture of the Tibetan Plateau
6.1 Milk Processing Systems in the Central Tibetan Plateau
6.2 Milk Processing Systems in the Eastern Tibetan Plateau
6.3 Milk Processing System in the Western Tibetan Plateau
6.4 Milk Culture in the Tibetan Plateau: Its Characteristics, Establishment and Evolution
Chapter 7 Milk Culture in Europe and the Caucasus
7.1 Milk Processing Systems in Bulgaria
7.2 Milk Processing Systems in France
7.3 Milk Processing Systems in the Caucasus
Chapter 8 The Monogenesis-Bipolarization Hypothesis of Eurasian Milk Culture
8.1 Monogenesis of Milk Culture
8.2 Developmental History of Milk Culture by Region
8.3 The Monogenesis-Bipolarization Hypothesis of Milk Culture
8.4 An Attempt to Verify the Monogenesis-Bipolarization Hypothesis
Chapter 9 Milk Processing Systems and Processes: A Reconsideration of Nakao’s Analytical Model
9.1 Problem Points
9.2 Descriptive Method for Modeling Milk Processing Units
9.3 Sequences of Milk Processing Units
9.4 Milk Processing Systems and Processes: Combinations of Milk Processing Unit Sequences
9.5 Comparison with Nakao’s Model
9.6 Flexibility of System Analysis in Terms of Milk Processing Units
9.7 Establishment of System Analysis in Terms of Milk Processing Units
9.8 Conclusion
Chapter 10 From Milk Culture to Pastoralism Theory
10.1 Pastoralism theory from the viewpoint of nutritional intake
10.2 A reconsideration of pastoralism theory from the viewpoint of milk culture
10.2.3 Typology of pastoralism along the axes of milk use and agricultural activity
Masahiro Hirata is a professor in the Department of Human Science, Obihiro University of Agriculture and Veterinary Medicine, Japan. As a graduate student at Kyoto University, Japan, he worked at the International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas (ICARDA), Syria in the Japan Overseas Cooperation Volunteers (JOCV) program, where he conducted research into the human ecology of pastoralists in Syria. Since then, for more than 25 years, he has carried out fieldwork in arid regions of the Eurasian continent, focusing on subsistence of pastoralists. His research interests include processing and uses of milk worldwide, subsistence strategies of pastoralism, and the origin and spread of pastoralism. He has published many papers and several books in the field of pastoralism and milk culture and is the chairperson of the Hokkaido Ethnological Society, Japan.
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.