At the Table of Power: Food and Cuisine in the African American Struggle for Freedom, Justice, and Equality
Autor Diane Spiveyen Limba Engleză Hardback – 17 oct 2022
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780822947318
ISBN-10: 0822947315
Pagini: 400
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 36 mm
Greutate: 0.75 kg
Editura: University of Pittsburgh Press
Colecția University of Pittsburgh Press
ISBN-10: 0822947315
Pagini: 400
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 36 mm
Greutate: 0.75 kg
Editura: University of Pittsburgh Press
Colecția University of Pittsburgh Press
Recenzii
“This singularly original, meticulously researched and wonderfully written work seamlessly integrates the extensive experience of Diane Spivey as insightful historian and international cookbook writer. It skillfully weaves together the important although neglected account of the essential contribution of African cuisine in the entire history of the United States. At the Table of Power can be rewardingly enjoyed as a marvelous cookbook, as an excellent general history, or as a powerful biographical dictionary. It excels in all three categories.” —Franklin W. Knight, coeditor of the Dictionary of Caribbean and Afro-Latin American Biography
“Diane M. Spivey has written a book that intersects African American cooks and cuisine with freedom, justice, law, and oppression. We now have a history of the professionalism of Black cuisine and the forces that have historically removed Black cooks from the center of their culinary creativity. Spivey presents an historical gentrification of African American culinary traditions that overtime has relegated cooks to the periphery of their history and traditions. This book documents and illustrates the presence of race in determining the status of African American culinary artists overtime limiting their growth and command of their culture.” —Samuel W. Black, director of the African American Program at the Senator John Heinz History Center
“Diane M. Spivey has compellingly moved Black cooks, chefs, caterers, and cuisine from the shadows into the floodlights of foodways in the United States and the Caribbean. With an amalgam of African, Native American, and European sources, she has put to rest the traditional narrative with sound scholarship and illustrative recipes. This book is a must to understand the African American story in its full dimensions.” —Robert L. Harris, Jr., professor emeritus of African American history and American studies at the Africana Studies and Research Center, Cornell University
“Diane M. Spivey has written a book that intersects African American cooks and cuisine with freedom, justice, law, and oppression. We now have a history of the professionalism of Black cuisine and the forces that have historically removed Black cooks from the center of their culinary creativity. Spivey presents an historical gentrification of African American culinary traditions that overtime has relegated cooks to the periphery of their history and traditions. This book documents and illustrates the presence of race in determining the status of African American culinary artists overtime limiting their growth and command of their culture.” —Samuel W. Black, director of the African American Program at the Senator John Heinz History Center
“Diane M. Spivey has compellingly moved Black cooks, chefs, caterers, and cuisine from the shadows into the floodlights of foodways in the United States and the Caribbean. With an amalgam of African, Native American, and European sources, she has put to rest the traditional narrative with sound scholarship and illustrative recipes. This book is a must to understand the African American story in its full dimensions.” —Robert L. Harris, Jr., professor emeritus of African American history and American studies at the Africana Studies and Research Center, Cornell University
Notă biografică
Diane M. Spivey is a culinary historian who has devoted more than forty years to the study and recording of African American food traditions and cooking. She is the author of the much heralded The Peppers, Cracklings, and Knots of Wool Cookbook: The Global Migration of African Cuisine and has written articles for TheEncyclopedia of African-American Culture and History, the Black Scholar, Blackpast.org, South Florida Gourmet, the Black Book Review, Newsday, and Scribner’s Encyclopedia of World Food and Culture. Born and reared in Chicago, she and her family now reside in Palmetto Bay, Florida.