By focusing on the cookbook Peace Never Tasted So Sweet, this article argues that CODEPINK strategically combines peace activist and food literacies to engage audiences in their antiwar efforts, strategies that take on benefits and drawbacks. Although feminist scholars from a variety of disciplines have studied cookbooks, researchers have yet to fully analyze the intersections of gendered activist literacies and cookbooks. Expanding upon arguments promoting food literacies as well as feminist analyses of cookbooks, this article illuminates CODEPINK’s efforts to teach readers how to critique military action, recruit peace-workers, build a movement, and bake pie
Between their detailed instructions, measurements, and helpful hints, cookbooks provide directives a...
Review of: Can She Bake a Cherry Pie? American Women and the Kitchen in the Twentieth Century. McFee...
Green plantains and chocolate ice cream cones, banana jam and beef fudge, pomegranate soup and raspb...
By focusing on the cookbook Peace Never Tasted So Sweet, this article argues that CODEPINK strategic...
To better understand campaigns for gender equality, we must examine how women challenge the family a...
In 1950, the Associated Country Women of the World (ACWW) published Cookery around the world, a cook...
The intimate connection between food and feminism was well documented in the consciousnessraising g...
Cookbooks are not just about cooking. As scholars from various disciplines have long argued, cookboo...
This study positions cookbooks and their associated discourse as rhetorical, relevant to the field a...
During the last forty years of the United States’ fight for woman suffrage, a handful of suffragists...
Recipes and songs as tools for solidarity: Women's oral texts, diaspora and communal identit
Recipe as inquiry explores how critical history research, recipe adaptation and food-centered storyt...
This thesis explores the subjects of food, cookbooks and food writing as rhetoric and as subversions...
One day in the summer of 2004, a shift of activists from Checkpoint Watch (CPW) brought to the check...
Within and against neoliberal systems Food Not Bombs serves hope. Food Not Bombs is a global anarchi...
Between their detailed instructions, measurements, and helpful hints, cookbooks provide directives a...
Review of: Can She Bake a Cherry Pie? American Women and the Kitchen in the Twentieth Century. McFee...
Green plantains and chocolate ice cream cones, banana jam and beef fudge, pomegranate soup and raspb...
By focusing on the cookbook Peace Never Tasted So Sweet, this article argues that CODEPINK strategic...
To better understand campaigns for gender equality, we must examine how women challenge the family a...
In 1950, the Associated Country Women of the World (ACWW) published Cookery around the world, a cook...
The intimate connection between food and feminism was well documented in the consciousnessraising g...
Cookbooks are not just about cooking. As scholars from various disciplines have long argued, cookboo...
This study positions cookbooks and their associated discourse as rhetorical, relevant to the field a...
During the last forty years of the United States’ fight for woman suffrage, a handful of suffragists...
Recipes and songs as tools for solidarity: Women's oral texts, diaspora and communal identit
Recipe as inquiry explores how critical history research, recipe adaptation and food-centered storyt...
This thesis explores the subjects of food, cookbooks and food writing as rhetoric and as subversions...
One day in the summer of 2004, a shift of activists from Checkpoint Watch (CPW) brought to the check...
Within and against neoliberal systems Food Not Bombs serves hope. Food Not Bombs is a global anarchi...
Between their detailed instructions, measurements, and helpful hints, cookbooks provide directives a...
Review of: Can She Bake a Cherry Pie? American Women and the Kitchen in the Twentieth Century. McFee...
Green plantains and chocolate ice cream cones, banana jam and beef fudge, pomegranate soup and raspb...