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‘Going Native?': Settler Colonialism and Food: Food and Identity in a Globalising World

Editat de Ronald Ranta, Alejandro Colás, Daniel Monterescu
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 22 iul 2023
This volume offers a comparative survey of diverse settler colonial experiences in relation to food, food culture and foodways - how the latter are constructed, maintained, revolutionised and, in some cases, dissolved. What do settler colonial foodways and food cultures look like? Are they based on an imagined colonial heritage, do they embrace indigenous repertoires or invent new hybridised foodscapes? What are the socio-economic and political dynamics of these cultural transformations? In particular, this volume focuses on three key issues: the evolution of settler colonial identities and states; their relations vis-à-vis indigenous populations; and settlers’ self-indigenisation – the process through which settlers transform themselves into the native population, at least in their own eyes. These three key issues are crucial in understanding settler-indigenous relations and the rise of settler colonial identities and states. 
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9783030962708
ISBN-10: 3030962709
Pagini: 277
Ilustrații: XII, 277 p.
Dimensiuni: 148 x 210 mm
Greutate: 0.35 kg
Ediția:1st ed. 2022
Editura: Springer International Publishing
Colecția Palgrave Macmillan
Seria Food and Identity in a Globalising World

Locul publicării:Cham, Switzerland

Cuprins

1. Introduction.- Beginning: Hybrid Food Cultures and Foodways.- 2. Spanish Settlers and Andean Food Systems.- 3. What Belongs in the “Federal Diet”?: Depictions of a National Cuisine in the Early American Republic.- 4. The Taste of Colonialism?: Changing Norms of Rice Production and Consumption in Modern Taiwan.- 5. ‘Like the Papacy of Mexican Cuisine’: Mayoras and Traditional Foods in Contemporary Mexico.- 6. Unsettling the History of Macadamia Nuts in Northern New South Wales.- 7. Definitions of Hawaiian Food: Evidence of Settler Colonialism in Selected Cookbooks from the Hawaiian Islands (1896-2021).- 8. Decolonising Israeli food? Between Culinary Appropriation and Recognition in Israel/Palestine.- 9. “Uneasy lies the head that wears the crown” - lamb or kangaroo, which should reign supreme? The implications of heroising a settler colonial food icon as national identity.- After Decolonisation?.- 10. ‘A Manly Amount of Wreckage’: South-AfricanFood Culture and Settler Belonging in Ivan Vladislavić’s Double Negative.- 11. Sustaining the Memory of Colonial Algeria through Food.- 12. The predicaments of settler gastrocolonialism.

Notă biografică

Ronald Ranta is Senior Lecturer in Politics and International Relations at the Kingston University London, UK. As a former chef, he has written extensively on the subject of food and identity, particularly national identity.

Alejandro Colás is Professor of International Relations at Birkbeck, University of London, UK. 

Daniel Monterescu is Associate Professor of Urban Anthropology and Food Studies at Central European University, Vienna, Austria. 

Textul de pe ultima copertă

This volume offers a comparative survey and analysis of diverse settler colonial experiences in relation to food, food culture and foodways - how the latter are constructed, maintained, revolutionised and, in some cases, dissolved. What do settler colonial foodways and food cultures look like? Are they based on an imagined colonial heritage, do they embrace indigenous repertoires or invent new hybridised foodscapes? What are the socio-economic and political dynamics of these cultural transformations?  In particular, this volume focuses on three key issues: the evolution of settler colonial identities and states; their relations vis-à-vis indigenous populations; and settlers’ self-indigenisation – the process through which settlers transform themselves into the native population, at least in their own eyes. These three key issues are crucial in understanding the rise of settler colonial identities and states, and their interaction with the indigenous populations that inhabit them.The work will be of interest to students and scholars of food studies, settler and post-colonial studies, sociologists, anthropologists and political scientists. 

Caracteristici

Addresses the subject of settler colonial identity and settler-indigenous relations through the prism of food Provides rich, original, innovative and empirical contributions from a wide range of geographic case studies Takes a multi-disciplinary approach, in a global comparative framework