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E-raamat: Communicating Food in Korea

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"An in-depth investigation of the complex relationships among food, culture, and society in Korea, Communicating Food in Korea presents diverse interpretations of food's economic, political, and sociocultural relevance. Grounded in a variety of disciplines, the chapters research the ways food intersects with social issues in Korean society"--

An in-depth investigation of the complex relationships among food, culture, and society in Korea, Communicating Food in Korea presents diverse interpretations of food’s economic, political, and sociocultural relevance. Grounded in a variety of disciplines, the chapters research the ways food intersects with social issues in Korean society.

Arvustused

This edited volume includes a baker's dozen of chapters by scholars at Korean and American institutions, organized around four major themes: moving from colonialism and hunger to food sovereignty; national cuisine in the era of globalization; food practices in multicultural Korea; and food tourism as related to food crisis. Because food and foodways can serve as a marker of social status and belong to the domain of customs and beliefs, as well as offering intersections with many other economic and political factors, this interdisciplinary work collects research from diverse fields including political science, communication studies, geography, and nutritionthe writing throughout is unmistakably scholarly[ .] Recommended. * Choice Reviews * Communicating Food in Korea is a valuable contribution to the relatively new and burgeoning field of food studies. Editors Jaehyeon Jeong and Joong-Hwan Oh approach their topic from uniquely non-Western angles (all 23 contributors are native Korean), using a variety of analytical techniques (historical method, interview, questionnaire, and textual analysis), and covering a very wide swath of topics. Organized under sections on colonialism/hunger to food sovereignty, national cuisine in a globalization era, food practices in multicultural Korea, and food tourism and food crisis, the book plumbs the depths of Korean food culture to show that cuisine acts as a major means of social communication and cultural signification. For these reasons, Communicating Food in Korea is groundbreaking, comprehensive, and eye-opening, welcomed in the research arena, classroom, and the policy-making offices. -- John A. Lent, Professor Emeritus, Temple University This fascinating edited volume provides thought-provoking and theoretically rich insights into diverse scholarly issues, including the construction of traditions, identity, (post-)colonialism, nationalism, globalization, neoliberalism, and cultural hybridity in Korean cuisine in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. This book is a valuable addition to the ever-growing canon of food scholarship in Korean cuisine from varied disciplines. Anyone interested in Korea or in food culture will be captivated by this multi-dimensional account of the intersection between food, culture, history, and society. -- Seok Lee, University of Pennsylvania [ This] volume contributes to the literature in a number of fields, and sheds light on the complexityand richness--of a food culture only now being recognized in the U.S. mainstream. Perhaps most significantly, it offers perspectives from within a culture not often seen by Western scholars, providing a more global context for examining issues of crucial concern. * Journal of Folklore Research * This collection of essays is a good introduction to current food policies and practices in South Korea as of the second decade of the Twenty-First Century. It provides an ample historical background and an ample bibliography for the new reader unfamiliar with these developments. Many of the essayists suggest directions for future research. Given the rise of South Korean food worldwide and its connections to South Korean cultural developments, especially K-Pop, this research should continue. The book is appropriate for upper-division and graduate students in the social sciences and in policy programs. * Food Anthropology *

Acknowledgments vii
Introduction 1(10)
Jaehyeon Jeong
Joong-Hwan Oh
PART I FROM COLONIALISM AND HUNGER TO FOOD SOVEREIGNTY
11(56)
1 Reclamation Projects and Development of Agricultural Land in Colonial Korea
13(24)
Chaisung Lim
2 The Narrative of Post-Childhood and Memories of Food: Study on the Symbolism of Food in Korean Postwar Formation Novels
37(10)
Soh-yon Yi
3 Addressing the Agri-Food Crisis in Korea: Implications of Food Sovereignty and the UN Declaration on the Rights of Peasants
47(20)
Byeong-Seon Yoon
Wonkyu Song
PART II NATIONAL CUISINE IN THE ERA OF GLOBALIZATION
67(88)
4 Food and Nationalism: Kimchi and Korean National Identity
69(22)
Hong Sik Cho
5 Buddhist Temple Food in South Korea: Interests and Agency in the Reinvention of Tradition in the Age of Globalization
91(26)
Seungsook Moon
6 The Reinvention of Traditional Cuisine as Counterculture
117(16)
Jeehee Kim
7 Taste of Korea: Governmental Discourse on National Cuisine and Its Articulation of Nation-ness
133(22)
Jaehyeon Jeong
PART III FOOD PRACTICES IN MULTICULTURAL KOREA
155(48)
8 Globalization of Halal food: A Study on Its Diffusion into and Export from South Korea
157(16)
Hyunseo Park
Youngmin Lee
9 Intrahousehold Discrepancy Regarding Food Insecurity within Intermarried Couples of Vietnamese Wives and Korean Husbands in South Korea
173(14)
Haney Choi
Hye Won Chung
Ji-Yun Hwang
Namsoo Chang
10 A Study on Multicultural Family Wives Adapting to Korean Cuisine and Dietary Patterns
187(16)
Youngil Park
Hee Sun Jeong
Nami Joo
PART IV FOOD TOURISM AND FOOD CRISIS
203(50)
11 Exploring Tourists' Korean Food Satisfaction across Culture, Gender, and Education: Using Secondary Data from International Visitor Survey
205(16)
Jee Hye Lee
12 Perceived Value, Importance of Nutrition Information, and Behavioral Intention for Food Tourism in Busan
221(10)
Joung-Min Son
Eun-Jin Lee
Hak-Seon Kim
13 Toward a Regional Level of Food Security in East Asia: Lessons from the 2007-2008 Rice Crisis
231(22)
Dong-Yeob Kim
Index 253(8)
About the Editors and Contributors 261
Jaehyeon Jeong is assistant professor (lecturer) of communication at the University of Utah Asia Campus. Joong-Hwan Oh is professor of sociology at Hunter College of The City University of New York.