The study of food in literature complicates established critical positions. Both a libidinal pleasure and the ultimate commodity, food in fiction can represent sex as well as money and brings the body and the marketplace together in ways that are sometimes obvious and sometimes unsettling. Spilling the Beans explores these relations in the context of late eighteenth and early nineteenth century women's fiction, where concerns about bodily, economic and intellectual productivity and consumption power decades of novels, conduct books and popular medicine. The introduction suggests ways in which attention to food in these texts might complicate recent developments in literary theory and criticism, while the body of the book is devoted to close...
Virginia Woolf in A room of one’s own (1929) builds a strong connection between food and the materia...
In cooperation with Klaus ScheunemannBrowsing through books and TV channels we find people pre-occup...
Eating the Text explores women's food use and consumption in the construction of gender on stage and...
This essay argues that the descriptions of food and eating in Frances Burney's early journals relate...
There has been much scholarly work completed on women's relationship to food, and the female body in...
Abstract. The following article will discuss the representation of food, eating and cooking in the c...
Traveling Women and Consuming Place in Eighteenth-Century Travel Letters and Journals considers how ...
In Food and Femininity Andrea Adolph explores the effects of the western philosophical distinction o...
Although the mention of food in literature for the young might at first appear innocuous, the numero...
Virginia Woolf in A Room of One’s Own builds a strong connection between food and the mate-rial cond...
Green plantains and chocolate ice cream cones, banana jam and beef fudge, pomegranate soup and raspb...
This project argues that British women writers of the 1930s and 1940s adapted state-supported discou...
This thesis explores the work of five of Britain’s most prominent food writers - Delia Smith, Jamie ...
The article deals with the semantic aspect of food functioning as punishment/reward and lovelessness...
During the period in which Maria Edgeworth wrote novels, novel-reading was a disreputable activity, ...
Virginia Woolf in A room of one’s own (1929) builds a strong connection between food and the materia...
In cooperation with Klaus ScheunemannBrowsing through books and TV channels we find people pre-occup...
Eating the Text explores women's food use and consumption in the construction of gender on stage and...
This essay argues that the descriptions of food and eating in Frances Burney's early journals relate...
There has been much scholarly work completed on women's relationship to food, and the female body in...
Abstract. The following article will discuss the representation of food, eating and cooking in the c...
Traveling Women and Consuming Place in Eighteenth-Century Travel Letters and Journals considers how ...
In Food and Femininity Andrea Adolph explores the effects of the western philosophical distinction o...
Although the mention of food in literature for the young might at first appear innocuous, the numero...
Virginia Woolf in A Room of One’s Own builds a strong connection between food and the mate-rial cond...
Green plantains and chocolate ice cream cones, banana jam and beef fudge, pomegranate soup and raspb...
This project argues that British women writers of the 1930s and 1940s adapted state-supported discou...
This thesis explores the work of five of Britain’s most prominent food writers - Delia Smith, Jamie ...
The article deals with the semantic aspect of food functioning as punishment/reward and lovelessness...
During the period in which Maria Edgeworth wrote novels, novel-reading was a disreputable activity, ...
Virginia Woolf in A room of one’s own (1929) builds a strong connection between food and the materia...
In cooperation with Klaus ScheunemannBrowsing through books and TV channels we find people pre-occup...
Eating the Text explores women's food use and consumption in the construction of gender on stage and...