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E-book: Eating Architecture

Contributions by , Contributions by , Contributions by , Edited by , Contributions by , Contributions by (University of Texas at Austin), Edited by , Contributions by , Contributions by , Contributions by
  • Format: 386 pages
  • Series: The MIT Press
  • Pub. Date: 17-Feb-2006
  • Publisher: MIT Press
  • Language: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780262275743
  • Format - PDF+DRM
  • Price: 166,40 €*
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  • This ebook is for personal use only. E-Books are non-refundable.
  • Format: 386 pages
  • Series: The MIT Press
  • Pub. Date: 17-Feb-2006
  • Publisher: MIT Press
  • Language: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780262275743

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Winner, Jackets Category, 2005 Association of American University Presses (AAUP) Book, Jacket, and Journal Show.

The contributors to this highly original collection of essays explore the relationship between food and architecture, asking what can be learned by examining the (often metaphorical) intersection of the preparation of meals and the production of space. In a culture that includes the Food Channel and the knife-juggling chefs of Benihana, food has become not only an obsession but an alternative art form. The nineteen essays and "Gallery of Recipes" in Eating Architecture seize this moment to investigate how art and architecture engage issues of identity, ideology, conviviality, memory, and loss that cookery evokes. This is a book for all those who opt for the "combination platter" of cultural inquiry as well as for the readers of M. F. K. Fisher and Ruth Reichl.

The essays are organized into four sections that lead the reader from the landscape to the kitchen, the table, and finally the mouth. The essays in "Place Settings" examine the relationships between food and location that arise in culinary colonialism and the global economy of tourism. "Philosophy in the Kitchen" traces the routines that create a site for aesthetic experimentation, including an examination of gingerbread houses as art, food, and architectural space. The essays in "Table Rules" consider the spatial and performative aspects of eating and the ways in which shared meals are among the most perishable and preserved cultural artifacts. Finally, "Embodied Taste" considers the sensual apprehension of food and what it means to consume a work of art. The "Gallery of Recipes" contains images by contemporary architects on the subject of eating architecture.

A highly original collection of essays that explore therelationship between food and architecture—the preparation ofmeals and the production of space.

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Winner of AAUP Book, Jacket and Journal Show Design Awards: Jackets & Covers Category 2005.
Acknowledgments ix
Prologue: Cuisine as Architectural Invention 1(4)
Phyllis Pray Bober
Introduction
5(16)
Paulette Singley
Jamie Horwitz
PLACE SETTINGS
Culinary Manifestations of the Genius Loci
21(12)
Allen S. Weiss
Taste Buds: Cultivating a Canadian Cuisine
33(18)
Susan Herrington
Consuming the Colonies
51(20)
Patricia Morton
Local Food Products, Architecture, and Territorial Identity
71(20)
Ferruccio Trabalzi
Too Much Sugar
91(24)
Clare Cardinal-Pett
PHILOSOPHY IN THE KITCHEN
Cuisine and the Compass of Ornament: A Note on the Architecture of Babette's Feast
115(16)
Daniel S. Friedman
Gingerbread Houses: Art, Food, and the Postwar Architecture of Domestic Space
131(20)
Barbara L. Miller
Science Designed and Digested: Between Victorian and Modernist Food Regimes
151(18)
Mark Hamin
The Missing Guest: The Twisted Topology of Hospitality
169(22)
Donald Kunze
Semiotica Ab Edendo, Taste in Architecture
191(16)
Marco Frascari
TABLE RULES
Morning, and Melancholia
207(4)
Laura Letinsky
Table Talk
211(18)
David Leatherbarrow
Food to Go: The Industrialization of the Picnic
229(18)
Mikesch Muecke
Table Settings: The Pleasures of Well-Situated Eating
247(12)
Alex T. Anderson
Eating Space
259(20)
Jamie Horwitz
EMBODIED TASTE
Butcher's White: Where the Art Market Meets the Meat Market in New York City
279(22)
Dorita Hannah
Delectable Decoration: Taste and Spectacle in Jean-Francois De Bastide's La Petite Maison
301(12)
Rodolphe el-Khoury
Dali's Edible Splits: Faces, Tastes, and Spaces in Delirium
313(26)
John C. Welchman
Hard to Swallow: Mortified Geometry and Abject Form
339(22)
Paulette Singley
Contributors 361(4)
Index 365