Pilaf, Pozole, and Pad Thai: American Women and Ethnic Food

Pilaf, Pozole, and Pad Thai: American Women and Ethnic Food

by Sherrie A. Inness (Editor)
Pilaf, Pozole, and Pad Thai: American Women and Ethnic Food

Pilaf, Pozole, and Pad Thai: American Women and Ethnic Food

by Sherrie A. Inness (Editor)

Paperback(First Edition)

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Overview

For many Americans, eating ethnic food is so commonplace as to be taken for granted. Yet, whether we acknowledge it or not, such foods create a powerful social language that speaks of cultural traditions and tastes that have been handed down from one generation to the next and, in some cases, appropriated and commodified by American commercial culture. Ethnic cooking represents both a source of sustenance and a complex form of communication.

In this volume, eleven scholars explore the role of ethnic food in American culture, with a particular focus on women. The first six chapters offer personal accounts of the ways in which ethnic meals are embedded in women's memories and fortify their connections to one another. From a Sicilian-born mother who affirms her allegiance to her heritage through the loving preparation of traditional tomato sauce and pasta, to a Swedish American woman whose dozens of boxes of recipe cards document a process of cultural assimilation, to an Armenian American who uses a shared passion for cooking to forge a relationship with her lover's family—these essays speak in a personal voice about the power of food as a marker of women's identity. The final five chapters take a more analytic approach, scrutinizing the social and political aspects of ethnic food and the phenomenon of "culinary tourism." One essay offers a brilliant meditation on the gendered discourse of cooking in the Mexican American community, showing how food preparation provides many Chicanas with a vital language of self-expression. Another essay probes the author's penchant for Thai food and other cuisines from economically dominated cultures, situating it in the context of a larger system of privilege and oppression and as a form of cultural colonialism. By going beyond the obvious, these essays challenge our assumptions and expand our understanding of the significance of ethnic food in women's lives.

Contributors include Meredith E. Abarca, Arlene Voski Avakian, Linda Murray Berzok, Benay Blend, Lynn Z. Bloom, Paul Christensen, Cathie English, Doris Friedensohn, Lisa Heldke, Heather Schell, and Leanne Trapedo Sims.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781558492868
Publisher: University of Massachusetts Press
Publication date: 04/09/2001
Edition description: First Edition
Pages: 248
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

Sherrie A. Inness is associate professor of English at Miami University of Ohio. Among her publications is The Lesbian Menace: Ideology, Identity, and the Representation of Lesbian Life (University of Massachusetts Press, 1997), which was selected by Choice as an "Outstanding Academic Book of the Year."   

Table of Contents

Acknowledgmentsix
Introduction: Eating Ethnic1
Part 1Reflections on Family, Food, and Ethnicity
Chapter 1Mac and Gravy17
Chapter 2Humble Pie40
Chapter 3Dalia Carmel: A Menu of Food Memories50
Chapter 4Writing and Cooking, Cooking and Writing69
Chapter 5My Mother's Recipes: The Diary of a Swedish American Daughter and Mother84
Chapter 6The Triumph of Fassoulia, or Aunt Elizabeth and the Beans102
Part 2Changing Relations to Ethnic Food
Chapter 7Los Chilaquiles de mi 'ama: The Language of Everyday Cooking119
Chapter 8"In the Kitchen Family Bread Is Always Rising!": Women's Culture and the Politics of Food145
Chapter 9Chapulines, Mole, and Pozole: Mexican Cuisines and the Gringa Imagination165
Chapter 10Let's Cook Thai: Recipes for Colonialism175
Chapter 11Gendered Feasts: A Feminist Reflects on Dining in New Orleans199
Contributors223
Index227

What People are Saying About This

Warren Belasco

A really fine collection of well-written, thoughtful, and interesting pieces, all loosely focused on the gendered nature of food behavior and the underlying theme of ethnicity.
—(Warren Belasco, author of Appetite for Change: How the Counterculture Took on the Food Industry)

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