Preface, Phillip ScrantonPart 1: Contexts1. Food Matters: Perspectives on an Emerging Field, Warren Belasco2. Food and Eating: Some Persisting Questions, Sidney W. MintzPart 2: The Construction of National Cusines3. Rituals of Pleasure in the Land of Treasures: Wine Consumption and the Making of French Identity in the Late Nineteenth Century, Kolleen M. Guy4. Eddie Shack was No Tim Horton: Donuts and the Folklore of Mass Culture in Canada, Steve Penfold5. Food and Nationalism: The Origins of Belizean Food, Richard R. WilkPart 3: The Business of Taste6. Inventing Baby Food: Gerber and the Discourse of Infancy in the United States, Amy Bentley7. How the French Learned to Eat Canned Food, 1809-1930s, Martin Bruegel8. Searching for Gold in Guacamole: California Growers Market the Avocado, 1910-1994, Jeffery CharlesPart 4: Ethnicity, Class, and the Food Industry9. Untangling Alliances: Social Tensions Surrounding Independent Grocery Stores and the Rise of Mass Retailing, Tracey Deutsch 10. As American as Budwiser and Pickles? Nation-Building in American Food Industries, Donna R. Gabaccia 11. Comida Sin Par. Construction of Mexican Food in Los Angeles: Foodscapes in a Transnational Consumer Society, Silivia FerreroPart 5: Food and National Politics12. Industrial Tortillas and Folkloric Pepsi: The Nutritional Consequences of Hybrid Cuisines in Mexico, Jeffery M. Pilcher13. Berlin in the Belle Epoque: A Fast Food History, Keith Allen14. Food and the Politics of Scarcity in Urban Soviet Russia, 1917-1941, Mauricio BorreroNotes on the ContributorsIndex
Warren Belasco is Professor of American Studies
at University of Maryland and one of the leading scholars in food
studies. He is the author of Appetite for Change:How the
Counterculture Took on the FoodIndustry.
Philip Scranton is the Board of Governors
Professor of History at Rutgers University and research director at
the Hagley Museum and Library. He is the author or editor of six
books, including EndlessNovelty: Specialty Production and
AmericanIndustrialization.
"Food Nations is a book I can't wait to teach. The individual
articles capture the centrality and complexity of the relationships
between food, nationhood, markets, and the manipulation of cultural
meaning within modernity." -- Judith Goode, Temple University
"Food keeps scholars honest: clarity is right there on the palate,
the plate, and the factory line, and nothing can illustrate better
the power of identity, class, and the marketing of nationality
better than a pickle, an avocado, a donut, or a tortilla. Food
Nations treats foods as keys to personal, familial, community, and
national identity. Reading the volume's elegant essays makes me
hungry for more." -- Merry Issacs White, author of The Material
Child
"Until recently, American consumers have limited their concerns
about food to additives and pesticides. But to be truly responsible
and healthy consumers, they also need to know something about food
business, politics, science, history, aesthetics, and traditions."
-- Nancy Ralph, Director, New York Food Museum
"Food studies is serious business and Food Nations is a major
contribution to our understanding of the business of food. This
meticulously researched book is a most welcome addition to an
exciting new field." -- Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, author of
Destination Culture
"That food and drink are at the very center of the body politic is
dramatically enforced in the revelatory collection of essays,
unified by the proposition that food is power and power, food. If
anyone can doubt that food is as serious a subject as politics or
business, let him read any one of these essays and stay amazed." --
Betty Fussell, author of My Kitchen Wars
"Food Nations is a cornucopia of fascinating information about why
we eat what we eat. There is much in this wide-ranging book to
stimulate anyone with an interest in the past, the present, and
even the future of food." -- Harvey Levenstein, author of
Revolution at the Table
"Food Nations joins a growing body of scholarship that proves
emphatically that food matters. . . .Food Nations should take a
respected place in a sophisticated and complex literature about
food, identity, society, and power." -- Hasia R. Diner, New York
University, author of Hungering for America
"If anyone can doubt that food is as serious a subject as politics
or business, let him read any one of these essays and stand
amazed." -- Betty Fussell, author TheStory of Corn and My Kitchen
Wars
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