Contents: Darra Goldstein: Foreword – Máirtín Mac Con Iomaire/Eamon Maher: Introduction – Section I Literary Representations of Irish Gastronomy – Dorothy Cashman: ‘That delicate sweetmeat, the Irish plum’: The Culinary World of Maria Edgeworth (1768-1849) – Flicka Small: ‘Know Me Come Eat With Me’: What Food Says about Leopold Bloom – Michael Flanagan: Cowpie, Gruel and Midnight Feasts: The Representation of Food in Popular Children’s Literature – Eamon Maher: The Rituals of Food and Drink in the Work of John McGahern – Rhona Richman Kenneally: The Elusive Landscape of History: Food and Empowerment in Sebastian Barry’s Annie Dunne – Tony Kiely: ‘We Managed’: Reflections on the Culinary Practices of Dublin’s Working Class Poor in the 1950s – Máirtín Mac Con Iomaire: ‘From Jammet’s to Guilbaud’s’: The Influence of French Haute Cuisine on the Development of Dublin Restaurants – Marjorie Deleuze: A New Craze for Food: Why is Ireland Turning into a Foodie Nation? – John Mulcahy: Transforming Ireland through Gastronomic Nationalism – Tara McConnell: ‘Brew as much as possible during the proper season’: Beer Consumption in Elite Households in Eighteenth-Century Ireland – Brian Murphy: The Irish Pub Abroad: Lessons in the Commodification of Gastronomic Culture – Eugene O’Brien: Bloomsday and Arthur’s Day: Secular Sacraments as Symbolic and Cultural Capital.
Máirtín Mac Con Iomaire is a lecturer in culinary arts at the
Dublin Institute of Technology. He is an award-winning chef,
culinary historian, food writer, broadcaster and ballad singer. He
has presented two series of the cookery programme Aingeal sa
Christin for RTÉ and has featured on numerous other radio and
television programmes. He is chair and co-founder of the Dublin
Gastronomy Symposium.
Eamon Maher is Director of the National Centre for Franco-Irish
Studies at the Institute of Technology, Tallaght (Dublin), where he
also lectures in humanities. His most recent book, co-edited with
Eugene O’Brien, is From Prosperity to Austerity: A Socio-Cultural
Critique of the Celtic Tiger and its Aftermath (2014).
"This collection will enlighten and delight readers. [...] The writers and editors are to be congratulated on their original research and new insights into a topic that interests everyone: food." (Eilis Ni Dhuibhne, The Irish Times, 28 June 2014)
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