Edible Ideologies: Representing Food and Meaning
Edible Ideologies: Representing Food and Meaning
Edible Ideologies: Representing Food and Meaning
Price: $74.50 FREE for Members
Type: eBook
Released: 2008
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Page Count: 267
Format: pdf
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0791472876
ISBN-13: 9780791472873

Contributors explore the relationship between food and the production of ideology.

From the Back Cover

Edible Ideologies argues that representations of food--in literature and popular fiction, cookbooks and travel guides, war propaganda, women's magazines, television and print advertisements--are not just about nourishment or pleasure. Contributors explore how these various modes of representation, reflecting prevailing attitudes and assumptions about food and food practices, function instead to circulate and transgress dominant cultural ideologies. Addressing questions concerning whose interests are served by a particular food practice or habit and what political ends are fulfilled by the historical changes that lead from one practice to another in Western culture, the essays offer a rich historical narrative that moves from the construction of the nineteenth-century English gentleman to the creation of two of today's iconic figures in food culture, Julia Child and Martha Stewart. Along the way, readers will encounter World War I propaganda, holocaust and Sephardic cookbooks, the Rosenbergs, German tour guides, fast food advertising, food packaging, and chocolate, and will find food for thought on the meanings of everything from camembert to Velveeta, from salads to burgers, and from tikka masala to Campbell's soup. "This is a solid intervention in contemporary debates about food and representation in the Anglo-American world. The essays are historically rich, theoretically engaging, and unpredictable enough to be immensely readable. Who knew that a box of Jell-O would do so much harm to Ethel Rosenberg's case?!" -- Krishnendu Ray, author of The Migrant's Table: Meals and Memories in Bengali-American Households Contributors include Nathan Abrams, Annette Cozzi, Marie I. Drews, Charlene Elliott, Lynne Fallwell, Celia M. Kingsbury, Kathleen LeBesco, Eric Mason, Peter Naccarato, Kathleen Banks Nutter, and Jean P. Retzinger.

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