Eating Culture: The Poetics and Politics of FoodTobias Döring, Markus Heide, Susanne Muehleisen Food has always operated in circulation between the local and the global, migration and resettlement and, with its power in defining and performing social meanings, served to construct notions of home and cultural otherness. But while previous studies emphasized these oppositions, our globalized and postcolonial setting today poses a new question: what happens to eating culture when the pure products go crazy? This transdisciplinary volume therefore draws on research in social anthropology, sociolinguistics, discourse analysis, literature, film and cultural studies to investigate practices, representations and functions of food in American, European and Asian societies and their cross-cultural engagements. It argues that foodways precisely come to mark the material basis for both the identification and the translatability of cultures. |
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Page 72
... Caribbean Like perhaps no other region in the world , the Caribbean stands for both a diversity of cultural origins and , as a result of the encounter of African , European , Asian and Amerindian cultures , their hybrid and creolized ...
... Caribbean Like perhaps no other region in the world , the Caribbean stands for both a diversity of cultural origins and , as a result of the encounter of African , European , Asian and Amerindian cultures , their hybrid and creolized ...
Page 76
... Caribbean , ' plantain ' is indeed big , with green skin and cooked as a vegetable , ' banana ' is the sweet fruit with yellow skin , ' fig ' may be used as a hypernym which can be modified to specify a particular sort , e.g. ' green ...
... Caribbean , ' plantain ' is indeed big , with green skin and cooked as a vegetable , ' banana ' is the sweet fruit with yellow skin , ' fig ' may be used as a hypernym which can be modified to specify a particular sort , e.g. ' green ...
Page 78
... Caribbean , Arawakan and Cariban languages , are largely extinct . Apart from place names , names for flora and fauna are thus almost the only linguistic traces of the indigenous people of the Caribbean . 13 There are a number of food ...
... Caribbean , Arawakan and Cariban languages , are largely extinct . Apart from place names , names for flora and fauna are thus almost the only linguistic traces of the indigenous people of the Caribbean . 13 There are a number of food ...
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ackee African American alimentary delinquents apple Asian become Black British Black identity black servant burger Cajun cannibalism Caribbean chicken Chinese cuisine Chinese food Chinese restaurants colonial consumers context cooking Creole creolization critique culinary culinary triangle Curry diasporic dining dinner dishes eaten eating culture Emma English equals Black authenticity ethnic European example fast food films food equals Black food names foodways French fruit gender German-American global hhh hhh horror films hybrid images Indian food ingredients Italian Jamaican kitchen Kürnberger language London Masala McDonald's meal menu Midnight's Children Mintz Mississippi Masala modern Moorfeld narrative national cuisine nineteenth century novel Orleans Oxford political practices production racial region representation rice and peas Routledge Rushdie served Sidney W signifier slaves social society soul food soup Sour Sweet spices still-life symbolic talk Tampopo taste texts tion traditional visual women York