Eating Culture: The Poetics and Politics of FoodFood 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 12
What emerges is a challenging and detailed view of the culinary syncretism by
which post - migratory societies have staged both their potentials and their
problems in the poetics and politics of food . The final chapter in this part , with a ...
What emerges is a challenging and detailed view of the culinary syncretism by
which post - migratory societies have staged both their potentials and their
problems in the poetics and politics of food . The final chapter in this part , with a ...
Page 44
It also speaks for a " permeability of the society " which does not at all fit the
pattern of deep conflict and hostility between the slave and emancipated black
and colored population ( Hall 1992a : 82 ) . Both Lachance ( 1992 ) and Hall
agree that ...
It also speaks for a " permeability of the society " which does not at all fit the
pattern of deep conflict and hostility between the slave and emancipated black
and colored population ( Hall 1992a : 82 ) . Both Lachance ( 1992 ) and Hall
agree that ...
Page 265
... i . e . , carried out by those who wield power against those who are subject to
that power . Instead of being a metaphor for a society in revolt or a society that
has lost its moral bearings , cannibalism here is a metaphor for patriarchy in crisis
.
... i . e . , carried out by those who wield power against those who are subject to
that power . Instead of being a metaphor for a society in revolt or a society that
has lost its moral bearings , cannibalism here is a metaphor for patriarchy in crisis
.
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