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Canadian Culinary Imaginations [Pehme köide]

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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 456 pages, kõrgus x laius: 248x191 mm, kaal: 454 g, 16 colour, 64 b&w photos
  • Ilmumisaeg: 16-Jul-2020
  • Kirjastus: McGill-Queen's University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0228000874
  • ISBN-13: 9780228000877
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 456 pages, kõrgus x laius: 248x191 mm, kaal: 454 g, 16 colour, 64 b&w photos
  • Ilmumisaeg: 16-Jul-2020
  • Kirjastus: McGill-Queen's University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0228000874
  • ISBN-13: 9780228000877
Teised raamatud teemal:
In the twenty-first century, food is media – it is not just on plates, but in literature and on screens, displayed in galleries, studios, and public places. Canadian Culinary Imaginations provokes new conversations about the food-related concepts, memories, emotions, cultures, practices, and tastes that make Canada unique. This collection brings together academics, writers, artists, journalists, and curators to discuss how food mediates our experiences of the nation and the world. Together, the contributors reveal that culinary imaginations reflect and produce the diverse bodies, contexts, places, communities, traditions, and environments that Canadians inhabit, as well as their personal and artistic sensibilities. Arranged in four thematic sections – Indigeneity and foodways; urban, suburban, and rural environments; cultural and national lineages; and subversions of categories – the essays in this collection indulge a growing appetite for conversations about creative engagements with food and the world at large. As the essays and images in Canadian Culinary Imaginations demonstrate, food is more than sustenance – as language and as visual and material culture, it holds the power to represent and remake the world in unexpected ways.


An exploration of food-focused art, literature, and culture and how they generate and disrupt discourses around Canadian nationhood and politics.

Muu info

An exploration of food-focused art, literature, and culture and how they generate and disrupt discourses around Canadian nationhood and politics.
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction 3(26)
Shelley Boyd
Dorothy Barenscott
Part One Indigeneity and Foodways: Stories from Home and Abroad
29(86)
1 Foodland Security: Access to Country Food by Inuit in an Urban Setting
31(6)
Barry Pottle
2 What Can We Learn from Dining with Bears? Indigenous Stories, Worldviews, and the Environment
37(20)
Margery Fee
3 Changing Tides: Indigenous Chefs at the Culinary Olympics and the Gastronomic Professionalization of Aboriginal Cooking
57(20)
Sebastian Schellhaas
4 Terra Nullius on the Plate: Colonial Blindness, Restaurant Discourse, and Indigenous Cuisines
77(16)
Zoe Tennant
5 From Meat to Metaphor: Beavers and Conflicting Imaginations of the Edible
93(22)
L. Sasha Gora
Part Two (Sub)Urban/Rural Imaginations: Producing and Representing Foodscapes
115(96)
6 Montreal in the Culinary Imagination
117(29)
Nathalie Cooke
7 Creating Contemporary Canadian Agri-Art: Learning from Practice, Responding to Place, Working with Immateriality
146(16)
Sylvia Grace Borda
8 Food, Place, and Power in Timothy Taylor's Stanley Park
162(21)
Wendy Roy
9 plot: An Interview with Cora and Don Li-Leger (The People's Food Security Bureau)
183(17)
Cora Don Li-Leger
Dorothy Barenscott
10 A Case Study on Ghost River Theatre's Food Performance
200(11)
Angela Ferreira
Part Three Culinary Lineages: Collective and Personal Reflections
211(2)
11 Chewed a Book Lately? Douglas Coupland's Souvenir of Canada Coffee-Table Books
213(28)
Shelley Boyd
12 Phototextual Remembering in Janice Wong's Chow: From China to Canada: Memories of Food + Family
241(22)
Glenn Deer
13 The Royal Cafe Experience
263(14)
Elyse Bouvier
14 Writing beyond "Currybooks": Construction of Racialized and Gendered Diasporic Identities in Anita Rau Badami's Can You Hear the Nightbird Call?
277(18)
Asma Sayed
15 Playing with Food
295(4)
Jason Wright
Part Four Subverting Categories: Critical-Creative Re-interpretations of Food
309(2)
16 Breaking Bread: Queer Foodways and the Non-human
311(22)
Jes Battis
17 A Taste for the Abject: Food in the Relational Artworks of Sandee Moore
333(15)
Sandee Moore
18 "Viciousness in the Kitchen": Women and Food in Alice Munro's Fiction and Mary Pratt's Visual Art
348(16)
Heidi Tiedemann Darroch
19 Table of Contents: Reading, Cooking, Eating Canadian Literature
364(12)
Alexia Moyer
20 A Meaf/Meeting in the Park: Ursula Johnson's (re)al-location and The Festival of Stewards
376(15)
David Diviney
Melinda Spooner
Ursula Johnson
Figures 391(6)
Contributors 397(6)
Index 403
Shelley Boyd is a Canadian literature specialist in the Department of English at Kwantlen Polytechnic University and author of Garden Plots: Canadian Women Writers and Their Literary Gardens. Dorothy Barenscott is an art historian specializing in modern and contemporary art and visual culture in the Department of Fine Arts at Kwantlen Polytechnic University.