NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

USA Conversation

The Conversation USA

The Conversation USA

Would you eat a grasshopper? In Oaxaca, it’s been a tasty tradition for thousands of years

  • Written by Jeffrey H. Cohen, Professor of Anthropology, The Ohio State University

Billions of people regularly eat insects. In the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca, chapulines – toasted grasshoppers – stand out as a beloved seasonal treat that follows the start of the rainy season, a period that runs from late May through September.

My new book, “Eating Grasshoppers: Chapulines and the Women who Sell Them,&rdqu...

Read more: Would you eat a grasshopper? In Oaxaca, it’s been a tasty tradition for thousands of years

More Articles ...

  1. Federal judge overturns part of Florida’s book ban law, drawing on nearly 100 years of precedent protecting First Amendment access to ideas
  2. Why do big oil companies invest in green energy?
  3. Harvard, like all Americans, can’t be punished by the government for speaking freely – and a federal court decision upholds decades of precedents saying so
  4. Your immune system attacks drugs like it does viruses – paradoxically offering a way to improve cancer treatment
  5. Calling deaths ‘preventable’ can obscure barriers to health care access and shift blame to individuals
  6. US women narrowed the pay gap with men by having fewer kids
  7. Does anyone go to prison for federal mortgage fraud? Not many, the numbers suggest
  8. Fed, under pressure to cut rates, tries to balance labor market and inflation – while avoiding dreaded stagflation
  9. Ukraine is starting to think about memorials – a tricky task during an ongoing war
  10. How a corpse plant makes its terrible smell − it has a strategy, and its female flowers do most of the work
  11. 5 ways students can think about learning so that they can learn more − and how their teachers can help
  12. After Charlie Kirk’s murder, the US might seem hopelessly divided – is there any way forward?
  13. Molecular ‘fossils’ offer microscopic clues to the origins of life – but they take care to interpret
  14. Identifying as a ‘STEM person’ makes you more likely to pursue a STEM job – and caregivers may unknowingly shape kids’ self-identity
  15. Emergency alerts may not reach those who need them most in Colorado
  16. 2 shootings, 2 states, minutes apart − a trauma psychiatrist explains how exposure to shootings changes all of us
  17. The Moon is getting slightly farther away from the Earth each year − a physicist explains why
  18. Harm-reduction vending machines offer free naloxone, pregnancy tests and hygiene kits
  19. Xi’s show of unity with Putin and Kim could complicate China’s delicate diplomatic balance
  20. Even professional economists can’t escape political bias
  21. Transgender policies struggle to balance fairness with inclusion in women’s college sports
  22. What Native-held lands in California can teach about resilience and the future of wildfire
  23. Solving the world’s microplastics problem: 4 solutions cities and states are trying after global treaty talks collapsed
  24. Charlie Kirk talked with young people at universities for a reason – he wanted American education to return to traditional values
  25. How hardships and hashtags combined to fuel Nepal’s violent response to social media ban
  26. How to avoid seeing disturbing content on social media and protect your peace of mind
  27. Yes, this is who we are: America’s 250-year history of political violence
  28. Scientists detected a potential biosignature on Mars – an astrobiologist explains what these traces of life are, and how researchers figure out their source
  29. Parasitic worms bury themselves in the brains of moose and elk – a new test can help diagnose these animals to prevent disease spread
  30. ‘Publish or perish’ evolutionary pressures shape scientific publishing, for better and worse
  31. Beauty sleep isn’t a myth – a sleep medicine expert explains how rest keeps your skin healthy and youthful
  32. Proposed cuts to NIH funding would have ripple effects on research that could hamper the US for decades
  33. Social scientists have long found women tend to be more religious than men – but Gen Z may show a shift
  34. Fewer international students are coming to the US, costing universities and communities that benefit from these visitors
  35. Bolsonaro joins a rogues’ gallery of coup plotters held to account for their failed power grab
  36. ‘This will not end here’: A scholar explains why Charlie Kirk’s killing could embolden political violence
  37. Detroit is the most challenging place in the country for people with asthma − here’s how to help kids in the Motor City breathe easier
  38. Who was Charlie Kirk? The activist who turned campus politics into national influence
  39. Federal subpoenas for transgender care records raise medical privacy concerns and put providers in a legal bind – a health law expert explains what’s at stake
  40. A federal program helps older people get jobs, but the Trump administration wants to get rid of it
  41. A new world order isn’t coming, it’s already here − and this is what it looks like
  42. A massive eruption 74,000 years ago affected the whole planet – archaeologists use volcanic glass to figure out how people survived
  43. How Giorgio Armani mastered the art of outfitting Hollywood stars to sell clothes to the masses
  44. How ‘South Park’ could help Democrats win back the young voters the party lost to Trump
  45. Drugged driving – including under the influence of cannabis and prescription drugs – is quietly becoming one of the most dangerous road hazards
  46. Poland responds to Russian drones incursion by invoking Article 4 of the NATO treaty − what happens next?
  47. Israeli strike in Doha crosses a new line from which relations with Gulf may not recover
  48. The discovery of a gravitational wave 10 years ago shook astrophysics – these ripples in spacetime continue to reveal dark objects in the cosmos
  49. Where does your glass come from?
  50. Sacred texts and ‘little bells’: The building blocks of Arvo Pärt’s musical masterpieces