Explores connections between what we eat and who we are through cross-cultural study of how personal identities and social groups are formed via food production, preparation, and consumption. Organized around critical discussion of what makes "good" food good (healthy, authentic, ethical, etc.). Uses anthropological and literary classics as well as recent writing and films on the politics of food and agriculture
The study of food is at once a classic theme in anthropological theorizing, as well as a burgeoning ...
The media bring the social and cultural significance of food to public attention in all their forms....
Book synopsis: Food and drink has been a focal point of modern social theory since the inception of ...
Everybody eats to live but food is more than nutrition. Food is a powerful carrier of cultural meani...
Food has been an integral filmic element since cinema’s earliest days, often as prop (“pie-in-the-fa...
Humanities Research Group Working Papers 7 We live in a culture of food. Everyone eats: but what we ...
This study was inspired by the author’s academic travel to Naples, Italy to study the food habits of...
Cookbooks. Menus. Ingredients. Dishes. Pots. Kitchens. Markets. Museum exhibitions. These objects, r...
Over the past few decades, an ever–increasing interest in food has contributed to the shedding of li...
'You are what you eat' - or do you eat what you are? How do our identities affect what we choose to ...
The dynamic of this paper is partly driven by curiosity about the apparent lack of curiosity regardi...
By: Amy E. Guptil (College at Brockport faculty member), Denise A. Copelton (College at Brockport fa...
This paper is based on a two-part argument. First, food studies should be more engaged in social the...
Interest in the anthropology of food has grown significantly in recent years. This is the first hand...
Since the mid-twentieth century, an increasing number of scholars have incorporated food studies int...
The study of food is at once a classic theme in anthropological theorizing, as well as a burgeoning ...
The media bring the social and cultural significance of food to public attention in all their forms....
Book synopsis: Food and drink has been a focal point of modern social theory since the inception of ...
Everybody eats to live but food is more than nutrition. Food is a powerful carrier of cultural meani...
Food has been an integral filmic element since cinema’s earliest days, often as prop (“pie-in-the-fa...
Humanities Research Group Working Papers 7 We live in a culture of food. Everyone eats: but what we ...
This study was inspired by the author’s academic travel to Naples, Italy to study the food habits of...
Cookbooks. Menus. Ingredients. Dishes. Pots. Kitchens. Markets. Museum exhibitions. These objects, r...
Over the past few decades, an ever–increasing interest in food has contributed to the shedding of li...
'You are what you eat' - or do you eat what you are? How do our identities affect what we choose to ...
The dynamic of this paper is partly driven by curiosity about the apparent lack of curiosity regardi...
By: Amy E. Guptil (College at Brockport faculty member), Denise A. Copelton (College at Brockport fa...
This paper is based on a two-part argument. First, food studies should be more engaged in social the...
Interest in the anthropology of food has grown significantly in recent years. This is the first hand...
Since the mid-twentieth century, an increasing number of scholars have incorporated food studies int...
The study of food is at once a classic theme in anthropological theorizing, as well as a burgeoning ...
The media bring the social and cultural significance of food to public attention in all their forms....
Book synopsis: Food and drink has been a focal point of modern social theory since the inception of ...