"A volume to browse and absorb." New York Times "This volume should absorb anyone with an appetite for unconventional food writing." STARRED REVIEW Publishers Weekly "It is easy to get quickly drawn in and once you do, it is difficult to put this book down." -- Andrea Rappaport San Francisco Book Review "Delights in manners ranging from the poetic to the political." Bookforum "The gloriously illustrated Gastronomica reader is a every bit as good as it looks." Times Literary Supplement (TLS)
Described in the "2008 Saveur 100" as 'At the top of our bedside reading pile since its inception in 2001', the award-winning "Gastronomica: The Journal of Food and Culture" is a quarterly feast of truly exceptional writing on food. Designed both to entertain and to provoke, "The Gastronomica Reader" now offers a sumptuous sampling from the journal's pages - including essays, poetry, interviews, memoirs, and an outstanding selection of the artwork that has made Gastronomica so distinctive. In words and images, it takes us around the globe, through time, and into a dazzling array of cultures, investigating topics from early hominid cooking to Third Reich caterers to the Shiite clergy under Ayatollah Khomeini who deemed Iranian caviar fit for consumption under Islamic law. Informed throughout by a keen sense of the pleasures of eating, tasting, and sharing food, "The Gastronomica Reader" will inspire readers to think seriously, widely, and deeply about what goes onto their plates. Gastronomica is a winner of the "Utne Reader's" Independent Press Award for Social/Cultural Coverage.
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Offers a sampling from the pages of "Gastronomica: The Journal of Food and Culture" - including essays, poetry, interviews, memoirs, and a selection of the artwork that has made Gastronomica so distinctive. This book investigates topics from early hominid cooking to Third Reich caterers to the Shiite clergy.
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Contents
Editor’s Introduction
appetites
Women Who Eat Dirt | Susan Allport
Badlands: Portrait of a Competitive Eater | John O’Connor
“Don’t Eat That”: The Erotics of Abstinence in American Christianity | R. Marie Griffith
A Shallot | Richard Wilbur
the family table
Delicacy | Paul Russell
The Unbearable Lightness of Wartime Cuisine | A. Marin
One Year and a Day: A Recipe for Gumbo and Mourning | James Nolan
The Prize Inside | Toni Mirosevich
Messages in a Bottle | Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett
dinner, 1933 | Charles Bukowski
social constructs
Otto Horcher, Caterer to the Third Reich | Giles MacDonogh
The Cooking Ape: An Interview with Richard Wrangham | Elisabeth Townsend
How Caviar Turned Out to Be Halal | H. E. Chehabi
“La grande bouffe”: Cooking Shows as Pornography | Andrew Chan
Recipe for S&M Marmalade | Judith Pacht
the art of food
Man Ray’s Electricité | Stefanie Spray Jandl
Food + Clothing = | Robert Kushner
Vik Muniz’s Ten Ten’s Weed Necklace | Vanessa Silberman
Zhan Wang: Urban Landscape | John Stomberg
The First Still Life | Lawrence Raab
personal journeys
Waiting for a Cappuccino: A Brief Layover along the Spice Trail | Carolyn Thériault
Include Me Out | Fred Chappell
Evacuation Day, or A Foodie Is Bummed Out | Merry White
Ripe Peach | Louise Glück
how others eat
My McDonald’s | Constantin Boym
Great Apes as Food | Dale Peterson
The Bengali Bonti | Chitrita Banerji
The Best “Chink” Food: Dog Eating and the Dilemma of Diversity | Frank H. Wu
close to the earth
Organic in Mexico: A Conversation with Diana Kennedy | L. Peat O’Neil
Mr. Clarence Jones, Carolina Rice Farmer | Jennie Ashlock
“GM or Death”: Food and Choice in Zambia | Christopher M. Annear
Wine, Place, and Identity in a Changing Climate | Robert Pincus
Episode with a Potato | Eric Ormsby
technologies
A Plea for Culinary Modernism: Why We Should Love New, Fast, Processed Food | Rachel Laudan
The Patented Peanut Butter and Jelly Sandwich: Food as Intellectual Property | Anna M. Shih
The Clockwork Roasting Jack, or How Technology Entered the Kitchen | Jeanne Schinto
Grinding Away the Rust: The Legacy of Iceland’s Herring Oil and Meal Factories | Chris Bogan
pleasures of the past
A la recherche de la tomate perdue: The First French Tomato Recipe? | Barbara Santich
The Egg Cream Racket | Andrew Coe
Frightening the Game | Charles Perry
Alkermes: “A Liqueur of Prodigious Strength” | Amy Butler Greenfield
Food for Thought | Eamon Grennan
Acknowledgments
Contributors
Illustration Credits
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“Rarefied but unpretentious, each issue is an artfully curated collection of essays, poems, art, and journalistic reportage. . . . Gastronomica's fare never fails to nourish us.” —Saveur magazine
“I am so impressed with this journal. It indicates an accuracy and diversity of information and style that will inspire and encourage people to pay attention to what they are eating.”—Alice Waters
“Food, even more than sex, is the basis for human relationships, and if Brillat-Savarin's 'Tell me what you eat and I will tell you who you are' is right, Gastronomica: The Journal of Food and Culture will enhance your life and improve your relationships with your family and your friends.”—Jacques Pépin
“Gastronomica deserves the food world's attention.” —Paul Levy
“A food journal of high standards that takes on substantive food issues.”—Patricia Unterman
“Interacting with so many disciplines, Gastronomica will assure a fine intellectual menu and reinvigorate the worlds of food and culture with ever higher standards of scholarship.”—Anne Willan
“[One of] my top food favorites from 2008. . . . A delightful study of all things food, even those that touch the world of food in a peripheral way.”—The Zest, food blog
“I am so impressed with this journal. It indicates an accuracy and diversity of information and style that will inspire and encourage people to pay attention to what they are eating.”—Alice Waters
“Food, even more than sex, is the basis for human relationships, and if Brillat-Savarin's 'Tell me what you eat and I will tell you who you are' is right, Gastronomica: The Journal of Food and Culture will enhance your life and improve your relationships with your family and your friends.”—Jacques Pépin
“Gastronomica deserves the food world's attention.” —Paul Levy
“A food journal of high standards that takes on substantive food issues.”—Patricia Unterman
“Interacting with so many disciplines, Gastronomica will assure a fine intellectual menu and reinvigorate the worlds of food and culture with ever higher standards of scholarship.”—Anne Willan
“[One of] my top food favorites from 2008. . . . A delightful study of all things food, even those that touch the world of food in a peripheral way.”—The Zest, food blog
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780520259393
Publisert
2010-02-21
Utgiver
University of California Press
Vekt
1542 gr
Høyde
254 mm
Bredde
197 mm
Dybde
28 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
376
Redaktør