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Sensory Formations Ser.: Taste Culture Reader : Experiencing Food and Drink by David Howes (2005, Trade Paperback)

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Product Identifiers

PublisherBloomsbury Academic & Professional
ISBN-101845200616
ISBN-139781845200619
eBay Product ID (ePID)46863695

Product Key Features

Number of Pages432 Pages
LanguageEnglish
Publication NameTaste Culture Reader : Experiencing Food and Drink
Publication Year2005
SubjectGeneral, Beverages / General, Anthropology / Cultural & Social
TypeTextbook
Subject AreaCooking, Social Science
AuthorDavid Howes
SeriesSensory Formations Ser.
FormatTrade Paperback

Dimensions

Item Height0.9 in
Item Weight22.9 Oz
Item Length9.2 in
Item Width6.1 in

Additional Product Features

Intended AudienceScholarly & Professional
LCCN2005-013776
TitleLeadingThe
ReviewsA rich range of disciplinary perspectives, both western and nonwestern, that engages taste as at once innate and profoundly cultural., "A timely and valuable resource on the wide-ranging topic of taste across the disciplines, from biology to sociology to gastronomic literature and philosophy, by pathbreaking writers in these fields."--Denise Gigante, Stanford University "A rich range of disciplinary perspectives, both western and nonwestern, that engages taste as at once innate and profoundly cultural."--Jennifer Fisher, York University, Toronto, A timely and valuable resource on the wide-ranging topic of taste across the disciplines, from biology to sociology to gastronomic literature and philosophy, by pathbreaking writers in these fields., "A timely and valuable resource on the wide-ranging topic of taste across the disciplines, from biology to sociology to gastronomic literature and philosophy, by pathbreaking writers in these fields." -- Denise Gigante, Stanford University "A rich range of disciplinary perspectives, both western and nonwestern, that engages taste as at once innate and profoundly cultural." -- Jennifer Fisher, York University, Toronto, "the best general food studies reader that I've come across to date. hellip; an excellent introduction to the diverse field of food studies, showcasing both new texts as well as classical pieces. hellip; more wide-ranging than the many themed food anthologies available hellip; very well-suited to introductory food studies courses." Food, Culture and Society "A timely and valuable resource on the wide-ranging topic of taste across the disciplines, from biology to sociology to gastronomic literature and philosophy, by pathbreaking writers in these fields." Denise Gigante, Stanford University "A rich range of disciplinary perspectives, both western and nonwestern, that engages taste as at once innate and profoundly cultural." Jennifer Fisher, York University, Toronto 'This volume presents an extensive and comprehensive collection of essays on 'ambivalence' and 'paradox' in meanings given to the tasting of food and drink. It constitutes an enjoyable and accomplished mulstidisciplinary journey from beginning (Part I) to end (Part VIII) where the reader is familiarized with perspectives on taste derived from history, sociology, anthropology, philosopohy, geography and psychology.' Monica Truninger, International Sociology Review (Vol. 22, No. 2) 'For those interested in food and food studies, this volume provokes thought about how to approach taste in an academic sense and why it is important to do so. A delicious collection addressing taste in all senses of the world.' Sara V. Komarnisky, Social Anthropolgy (No. 15.3, 2007) 'This is a sufficiently captivating collection, with a good number of original contributions and enough sprakling papers to put the study of taste back where it should be: on the tips of our tongues.' Journal of the Royal Anthropological Insitute, Vol 14, No 2, June 2008, 'A timely and valuable resource on the wide-ranging topic of taste across the disciplines, from biology to sociology to gastronomic literature and philosophy, by pathbreaking writers in these fields.'Denise Gigante, Stanford University'A rich range of disciplinary perspectives, both western and nonwestern, that engages taste as at once innate and profoundly cultural'.Jennifer Fisher, York University, Toronto
Dewey Edition22
IllustratedYes
Dewey Decimal641.3
Table Of ContentAcknowledgments Introduction: 'Perspectives on Taste' Carolyn Korsmeyer Part I: Taste: Physiology and Circumstance Preface 1. 'On Taste' Jean-Anthelme Brillat-Savarin 2. 'Chemical Senses: Taste and Smell' Linda M. Bartoshuk and Valerie B. Duffy 3. 'Culinary Themes and Variations' Elizabeth Rozin and Paul Rozin 3a. 'Flavor principles: some applications' Elisabeth Rozin Part II: Taste Cultures: Gustation in History Preface 4. 'Retrieving Tastes: Two Sources of Cuisine' Jean-Franois Revel 5. 'The High and the Low: Culinary Culture in Asia and Europe' Jack Goody 6. 'Taste of Luxury, Taste of Necessity' Pierre Bourdieu 7. 'Colonial Creoles: The Formation of Tastes in Early America' Donna R. Gabaccia 7a. Hoppin' John 8. 'Tasty Meals and Bitter Gifts' M.J. Weismantel, Part III. Eloquent Flavours Preface 9. 'Salt: the Edible Rock' Margaret Visser 10. 'Sweetness and Meaning' Sidney Mintz 11. 'Spices: Tastes of Paradise' Wolfgang Schivelbusch 12. 'Thick Sauce: Remarks on the Social Relations of the Songhay' Paul Stoller and Cheryl Olkes, Part IV: Body and Soul Preface 13. 'Food as Divine Medicine' T. Sarah Peterson 14. 'Food with Saints' R.S, Khare 15. 'Zen and the Art of Tea' D.T. Suzuki 16. 'Living Ramadan: Fasting and Feasting in Morocco' Marjo Buitelaar 17. Bitter Herbs and Unleavened Bread (from the Passover Haggadah) 18. 'Feasting with Dead Souls' Elizabeth Carmichael and Chloe Sayer Part V: Taste and Aesthetic Discrimination Preface 19. 'Of the Standard of Taste' David Hume 20. 'Objective and Subjective Senses: The sense of taste' Immanual Kant 21. 'Rasa: Delight of the Reason' B. N. Goswamy 22. 'Pleasures of the Proximate Senses: Eating, Taste, and Culture' Yi-Fu Tuan Part VI: Fine discernments and the Cultivation of Taste Preface 23. 'Of Gastronomes and Guides' Stephen Mennell 24. 'Champagne and Caviar: Soviet Kitsch' Jukka Gronow 25. 'Place Matters' Amy B. Trubek 26. 'Tasting Problems and Errors of Perception' Emile Peynaud 27. 'On the Zeedijk' Richard Watson Part VII: Taste, Emotion, and Memory Preface 28. 'The Madeleine' Marcel Proust 29. 'The Breast of Aphrodite' C. Nadia Seremetakis 30. 'Synaesthesia, Memory, and the Taste of Home' David E. Sutton 31. 'Food and Emotion' Deborah Lupton 32. 'The Pale Yellow Glove' M.F.K. Fisher 32a. Christmas Cake 32b. Sunshine Cake Part VIII: Artifice and Authenticity Preface 33. 'Artificial Flavours' Constance Classen, David Howes, and Anthony Synnott 33a. Rainbow Delight Cake 34. 'Taste in an Age of Convenience: From Frozen Foods to Meals in 'the Matrix'' Roger Haden 35. 'The Play's the Thing: Dining out in the New Russia' Darra Goldstein 36. 'Identity and the Global Stew' Allison James 37. 'But Is It Authentic? Culinary travel and the search for the "genuine article"' Lisa Heldke Succulent Selection: A Select Bibliography of 50 Further Readings Juneko Robinson Permissions Index
SynopsisFrom Eve's apple to Proust's madeleine to today's culinary tourism, food looms large in culture. Sociologists and anthropologists study cooking and eating practices across the globe. Debates about health and nutrition are common in news reports. Yet despite its fundamental relationship to food, taste is mysteriously absent from most of these discussions. The flavours of foods permeate social relations, religious and other occasions. Charged with memory, emotion, desire and aversion, taste is arguably the most evocative of the senses. The Taste Culture Reader explores the sensuous dimensions of eating and drinking, from the physiology of the tongue to the embodiment of social identities and enactment of ceremonial meanings. A cornucopia of historical, cross-cultural and theoretical views is offered, drawing from anthropology, sociology, history, philosophy, science - and more. This book will interest anyone seeking to understand more fully the importance of food and flavor in human experience., From Eve's apple to Proust's madeleine to today's culinary tourism, food looms large in culture. Debates about health and nutrition are common in news reports. Yet despite its fundamental relationship to food, taste is mysteriously absent from most of these discussions. The flavors of foods permeate social relations, religious and other occasions. Charged with memory, emotion, desire and aversion, taste is arguably the most evocative of the senses. The Taste Culture Reader explores the sensuous dimensions of eating and drinking, from the physiology of the tongue to the embodiment of social identities and enactment of ceremonial meanings. This book will interest anyone seeking to understand more fully the importance of food and flavor in human experience.
LC Classification NumberTX651.T39 2005

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