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Taste Culture Reader: Experiencing Food and Drink 2nd edition [Kõva köide]

Edited by (University at Buffalo (SUNY), USA), Series edited by (Concordia University, Canada)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 416 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 757 g
  • Sari: Sensory Formations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 17-Nov-2016
  • Kirjastus: Bloomsbury Academic
  • ISBN-10: 0857857894
  • ISBN-13: 9780857857897
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 416 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 757 g
  • Sari: Sensory Formations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 17-Nov-2016
  • Kirjastus: Bloomsbury Academic
  • ISBN-10: 0857857894
  • ISBN-13: 9780857857897
Teised raamatud teemal:

Taste is recognized as one of the most evocative senses. The flavors of food play an important role in identity, memory, emotion, desire, and aversion, as well as social, religious and other occasions. Yet despite its fundamental role, taste is often mysteriously absent from discussions about food.

Now in its second edition, The Taste Culture Reader examines the sensuous dimensions of eating and drinking and highlights the centrality of taste in human experience. Combining both classic and contemporary sources from anthropology, philosophy, sociology, history, science, and beyond, the book features excerpts from texts by David Hume, Immanuel Kant, Pierre Bourdieu, Brillat-Savarin, Marcel Proust, Sidney Mintz, and M.F.K. Fisher as well as original essays by authors such as David Sutton, Lisa Heldke, David Howes, Constance Classen, and Amy Trubek. This edition has been revised substantially throughout to include the latest scholarship on the senses and features new introductions from the editor as well as 10 new chapters.

The perfect introduction to the study of taste, this is essential reading for students in food studies, anthropology, sensory studies, philosophy, and culinary arts.

Arvustused

For the Sensory Formations series, Korsmeyer has compiled a collection of previously published essays about the aesthetics of taste. She arranges the essays into eight segments, commencing with a scientific review of the biological and physical processes of taste, then moving on to environmental and cultural impacts on how human beings experience and describe the taste of what is consumed. Korsmeyer includes classic writing on taste from Jean Anthelme Brillat-Savarin, Jean-Franc¸ois Revel, David Hume, and Immanuel Kant, as well as works by contemporary food historians such as Sidney Mintz and Darra Goldstein, and food writers M. F. K. Fisher, Margaret Visser, and Amy B. Trubek Summing Up: Recommended. Lower-division undergraduates and above; faculty and general readers. * CHOICE * The Taste Culture Reader is a fantastic text for anyone interested in food and sensory experience. This new edition retains classic texts while broadening the already interdisciplinary scope of this excellent reader. An excellent tool for the classroom. * Rachel Black, Connecticut College, USA * This collection is destined to become a classic in the field of food studies, as it reflects the original editions key strengths and includes new material that adds coherence and depth. This multidisciplinary exploration expands our understanding of taste, and should be of interest to anyone who eats. * Rachel Ankeny, University of Adelaide, Australia * A marvelous interdisciplinary collection that ranges from biology through the social sciences to philosophy and literature has just gotten better. If you have ever thought about food, you will find much intellectual nourishment here; if you have never thought about it, this is the place to begin. * Larry Shiner, University of Illinois Springfield, USA * The Taste Culture Reader provides splendid material to introduce a variety of themes. * Peter Scholliers, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium * because Korsmeyer recruited authors to write new original material, this second edition is more than simply an updated survey of relevant literature about taste, food, drink, and culture. On the whole, her strategy proves to be a very successful one. * FoodAnthropology *

Muu info

New edition of this field-defining textbook on the sensory experiences of food, including classical and contemporary sources in anthropology, history, philosophy, science and beyond.
Acknowledgments viii
Introduction: Perspectives on Taste 1(8)
Carolyn Korsmeyer
Part I Taste: Physiology and Circumstance
9(36)
Preface
11(2)
1 On Taste
13(8)
Jean-Anthelme Brillat-Savarin
2 Chemical Senses: Taste and Smell
21(8)
Linda M. Bartoshuk
Valerie B. Duffy
3 Multisensory Flavour Perception
29(8)
Charles Spence
4 Culinary Themes and Variations
37(8)
Elisabeth Rozin
Paul Rozin
Part II Taste Cultures: Gustation in History
45(58)
Preface
47(2)
5 Retrieving Tastes: Two Sources of Cuisine
49(5)
Jean-Francois Revel
6 Taste of Luxury, Taste of Necessity
54(6)
Pierre Bourdieu
7 The High and the Low: Culinary Culture in Asia and Europe
60(13)
Jack Goody
8 Spices and Medieval Cuisine
73(7)
Paul Freedman
9 Excess and Performance: Dining in Russian History
80(8)
Darra Goldstein
10 Colonial Creoles: The Formation of Tastes in Early America
88(6)
Donna R. Gabaccia
11 Haute Food: Modernity at Table
94(9)
Priscilla Parkhurst Ferguson
Part III Eloquent Flavors
103(44)
Preface
105(2)
12 Salt: The Edible Rock
107(4)
Margaret Visser
13 Sweetness and Meaning
111(11)
Sidney Mintz
14 Thick Sauce: Remarks on the Social Relations of the Songhay
122(11)
Paul Stoller
Cheryl Olkes
15 Tasty Meals and Bitter Gifts
133(10)
M. J. Weismantel
16 Blandness---Detachment
143(4)
Francois Jullien
Part IV Body and Soul
147(46)
Preface
149(2)
17 Food as Divine Medicine
151(8)
T. Sarah Peterson
18 Food with Saints
159(9)
R.S. Khare
19 Zen and the Art of Tea
168(9)
D. T. Suzuki
20 Living Ramadan: Fasting and Feasting in Morocco
177(5)
Marjo Buitelaar
21 Bitter Herbs and Unleavened Bread (from the Passover Haggadah)
182(3)
22 Feasting with Dead Souls
185(8)
Elizabeth Carmichael
Chloe Sayer
Part V The Discriminating Sense: Taste Aesthetic and Gustatory
193(44)
Preface
195(2)
23 Of the Standard of Taste
197(8)
David Hume
24 Objective and Subjective Senses: The Sense of Taste
205(6)
Immanuel Kant
25 Rasa: Delight of the Reason
211(10)
B. N. Goswamy
26 Pleasures of the Proximate Senses: Eating, Taste, and Culture
221(8)
Yi-Fu Tuan
27 Coffee in the Age of Gastronomy: A
Chapter in the History of Taste
229(8)
Denise Gigante
Part VI Fine Discernments and the Cultivation of Taste
237(52)
Preface
239(2)
28 Of Gastronomes and Guides
241(9)
Stephen Mennell
29 Tasting and Liking: Multisensory Flavor Perception and Hedonic Evaluation
250(11)
Barry C. Smith
30 Place Matters
261(11)
Amy B. Trubek
31 Tasting Problems and Errors of Perception
272(7)
Emile Peynaud
32 On the Zeedijk
279(10)
Richard Watson
Part VII Taste, Emotion, and Memory
289(38)
Preface
291(2)
33 The Madeleine
293(4)
Marcel Proust
34 The Breast of Aphrodite
297(6)
C. Nadia Seremetakis
35 Synesthesia, Memory, and the Taste of Home
303(12)
David E. Sutton
36 Food and Emotion
315(7)
Deborah Lupton
37 The Pale Yellow Glove
322(5)
M. F. K. Fisher
Part VIII Artifice, Authenticity, and Artistry
327(53)
Preface
329(2)
38 Artificial Flavours
331(5)
Constance Classen
David Howes
Anthony Synnott
39 Taste in an Age of Convenience
336(10)
Roger Haden
40 The Taste of Yucatecan Food: Negotiating Authenticity Steffan Igor
346(8)
Ayora-Diaz
41 But is it Authentic? Culinary Travel and the Search for the "Genuine Article"
354(9)
Lisa Heldke
42 Eating Contemporary Art: A Case Study in Experimental Collaboration
363(8)
Claire Schneider
43 The Content of Cooking: Modernist Cuisine, Philosophy, and Art
371(9)
Russell Pryba
Bibliography 380(2)
Notes on Contributors 382(5)
Permissions 387(4)
Index 391
Carolyn Korsmeyer is Professor of Philosophy at the University at Buffalo, State University of New York, USA