Difference between revisions of "DFM Sri Lanka literature review"

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{{Report
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== Metadata ==
| title = A Preliminary Analysis of the Social Economy of Dried Fish in Sri Lanka
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| author = Dilanthi Koralagama, Shalika Wickrama, and Anupama Adikari
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=== abstract ===
| series_editor = Derek Johnson (DFM Principal Investigator)
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The social economy of dried fish in Sri Lanka, an island located at the crossroads of maritime trade be-tween Europe, East Africa, South and Southeast Asia, has a long history. Dried fish has not only been an important commodity traded within the island and among neighbouring countries, but it has also played a significant nutritional and cultural role in the Sri Lankan diet. Although a greater proportion of the total fish production is iced, traded, and consumed as fresh fish, it is estimated that 14 percent of the catch is preserved using simple techniques such as sun drying, salting, smoking, and fermentation, collectively referred to as “dried fish.” In Sri Lankan cuisine, dried fish is consumed as a main dish, as well as a condiment to enhance the flavour of vegetable dishes and rice.
| technical_editor = Steven Smeltz and Eric Thrift
+
 
| date = 2021
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=== series ===
| series = DFM Working Paper
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DFM Working Paper
| cover_image = https://driedfishmatters.org/kb/images/thumb/f/fc/Dried-fish-products-at-general-store-Bergala-Sri-Lanka-2.jpg/1600px-Dried-fish-products-at-general-store-Bergala-Sri-Lanka-2.jpg
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| logos = https://driedfishmatters.org/kb/images/thumb/8/82/DFM_logo.png/300px-DFM_logo.png https://driedfishmatters.org/kb/images/8/8d/Ruhuna_logo.jpg
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=== title ===
| abstract = The social economy of dried fish in Sri Lanka, an island located at the crossroads of maritime trade be-tween Europe, East Africa, South and Southeast Asia, has a long history. Dried fish has not only been an important commodity traded within the island and among neighbouring countries, but it has also played a significant nutritional and cultural role in the Sri Lankan diet. Although a greater proportion of the total fish production is iced, traded, and consumed as fresh fish, it is estimated that 14 percent of the catch is preserved using simple techniques such as sun drying, salting, smoking, and fermentation, collectively referred to as “dried fish.” In Sri Lankan cuisine, dried fish is consumed as a main dish, as well as a condiment to enhance the flavour of vegetable dishes and rice.
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A Preliminary Analysis of the Social Economy of Dried Fish in Sri Lanka
| advisor = Nireka Weeratunge and Oscar Amarasinghe
+
 
| short_title = Social economy of dried fish in Sri Lanka
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=== short title ===
| license = {{CC BY-SA license}}
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Social economy of dried fish in Sri Lanka
| address = {{address}}
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| acknowledgements = {{SSHRC acknowledgement}}
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=== date ===
}}
+
2021
 +
 
 +
=== author(s) ===
 +
Dilanthi Koralagama, Shalika Wickrama, and Anupama Adikari
 +
 
 +
=== contributor(s) ===
 +
 
 +
 
 +
=== translator ===
 +
 
 +
 
 +
=== editor ===
 +
 
 +
 
 +
=== series editor ===
 +
Derek Johnson (DFM Principal Investigator)
 +
 
 +
=== technical editor ===
 +
Steven Smeltz and Eric Thrift
 +
 
 +
=== advisor(s) ===
 +
Nireka Weeratunge and Oscar Amarasinghe
 +
 
 +
=== license ===
 +
{{CC BY-SA license}}
 +
 
 +
=== address ===
 +
{{address}}
 +
 
 +
=== acknowledgements ===
 +
{{SSHRC acknowledgement}}
 +
 
 +
== Cover media ==
 +
 
 +
=== logos ===
 +
[[File:DFM_logo.png|150px]]
 +
[[File:Ruhuna_logo.jpg]]
 +
 
 +
=== cover image ===
 +
[[File:Dried-fish-products-at-general-store-Bergala-Sri-Lanka-2.jpg|800x800px]]
 +
 
 +
<span class="plainlinks">[https://driedfishmatters.org/cgi-bin/report.py?page={{urlencode:{{FULLPAGENAME}}|WIKI}}<span class="mw-ui-button mw-ui-progressive" role="button">Generate report</span>]</span>
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 +
== Contents ==
 +
 
 +
== Status ==
 +
 
 +
== Versions ==
 +
 
 +
 
  
 
== Contents ==
 
== Contents ==

Revision as of 13:11, 19 July 2021

Metadata

abstract

The social economy of dried fish in Sri Lanka, an island located at the crossroads of maritime trade be-tween Europe, East Africa, South and Southeast Asia, has a long history. Dried fish has not only been an important commodity traded within the island and among neighbouring countries, but it has also played a significant nutritional and cultural role in the Sri Lankan diet. Although a greater proportion of the total fish production is iced, traded, and consumed as fresh fish, it is estimated that 14 percent of the catch is preserved using simple techniques such as sun drying, salting, smoking, and fermentation, collectively referred to as “dried fish.” In Sri Lankan cuisine, dried fish is consumed as a main dish, as well as a condiment to enhance the flavour of vegetable dishes and rice.

series

DFM Working Paper

title

A Preliminary Analysis of the Social Economy of Dried Fish in Sri Lanka

short title

Social economy of dried fish in Sri Lanka

date

2021

author(s)

Dilanthi Koralagama, Shalika Wickrama, and Anupama Adikari

contributor(s)

translator

editor

series editor

Derek Johnson (DFM Principal Investigator)

technical editor

Steven Smeltz and Eric Thrift

advisor(s)

Nireka Weeratunge and Oscar Amarasinghe

license

CC BY-SA icon.svg

This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/.

address

Dried Fish Matters Project Department of Anthropology, Faculty of Arts 432 Fletcher Argue Building, 15 Chancellor Circle The University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB, R3T 2N2 CANADA

dried.fish.matters@umanitoba.ca

acknowledgements

SSHRC CRSH logo.svg

This work draws on research supported by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council.

Cover media

logos

DFM logo.png Ruhuna logo.jpg

cover image

Dried-fish-products-at-general-store-Bergala-Sri-Lanka-2.jpg

Generate report

Contents

Status

Versions

Contents