The Global Hearth
“Although we have very limited data, if we just accept that people are people and they are in a way like us, [we understand] they want to love and be loved.” - Gyoung-ah Lee, Professor of Anthropology, Asian Studies, and Food Studies Archaeologist Gyoung-Ah Lee invites us to look past the broken stones and pottery shards of the Neolithic period to see the profoundly human stories they carry. Reframing the ancient world not as a cold struggle for survival, but as a place where people expressed themselves artistically, leaving behind touching artifacts such as a Neolithic infant's footprint preserved in a clay plate. The conversation re-stories common tropes to show how the move from foraging to farming was a sophisticated, balanced transition guided by Traditional Ecological Knowledge—a "bottom-up" practice centered on stewardship and resilience. By illuminating the communal hearths of ancient Korea, Professor Lee shows us that food has always been more than just nutrition; it is a medium for connection and community that has linked humans and our ancestors together for thousands of years. Quick links: Han Kang, winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature 2024 [https://www.nobelprize.org/prizes/literature/2024/han/facts/] Jeju Island, Korea [https://insidejeju.com/jeju-island/] Gyoung-ah Lee’s Google Scholar Page [https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=3iAYl34AAAAJ&hl=en] Lastly, remember to follow University of Oregon Global Ducks [https://www.linkedin.com/company/global-ducks/posts/?feedView=all] on LinkedIn, and your questions, comments, insights (and favorite poetry!) are welcomed via email to gsi@uoregon.edu [gsi@uoregon.edu]. Thank you for joining us at the Global Hearth.
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