1 option
The immigrant kitchen : food, ethnicity, and diaspora / Vivian Nun Halloran.
Van Pelt Library GT2853.U5 H35 2016
Available
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Halloran, Vivian Nun, 1971- author.
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Food habits--United States.
- Food habits.
- Immigrants.
- United States.
- Food in literature.
- Americanization.
- Immigrants--United States--Anecdotes.
- Immigrants--Cultural assimilation.
- Genre:
- Anecdotes.
- Physical Description:
- xii, 151 pages ; 24 cm
- Place of Publication:
- Columbus : The Ohio State University Press, [2016]
- Summary:
- In The Immigrant Kitchen: Food, Ethnicity, and Diaspora, Vivian Nun Halloran examines food memoirs by immigrants and their descendants and reveals how their treatment of food deeply embeds concerns about immigrant identity in the United States. Halloran argues that by offering a glimpse into the authors' domestic lives through discussions of homemade food, these memoirs demystify the processes of immigration, assimilation, acculturation, and expatriation-ultimately examining what it means to live as naturalized citizens of the United States. Having grown up hearing about their parents' often fraught experiences of immigration, these authors examine the emotional toll these stories took and how such stories continue to affect their view of themselves as Americans. Halloran covers a wide swathe of immigrant food memoirs, moving seamlessly between works by authors such as Austin Clarke, Madhur Jaffrey, Kim Sunée, Diana Abu-Jaber, Eduardo Machado, Colette Rossant, Maya Angelou, and Jonathan Safran Foer. The Immigrant Kitchen describes how these memoirs function as a complex and engaging mass media genre that caters to multiple reading constituencies. Specifically, they entertain readers with personal anecdotes and recollections, teach new culinary skills through recipes, share insight into different cultural mores through ethnographic and reportorial discussions of life in other countries, and attest to the impact that an individual's legal immigration into the United States continues to have down through the generations of his or her American-born families. Book jacket.
- Contents:
- From academic sojourners to settler migrants: "scholarship boy" and girls in the kitchen
- Eating in public as performance of assimilation, diaspora, or ethnic belonging
- Mapping the new south(west)ern home
- Expats in love: recipes for belonging abroad
- Diasporic inventions: reclaiming family culinary traditions
- Talking turkey: the Thanksgiving holiday as the measure of assimilation.
- Notes:
- Includes bibliographical references (pages 143-148) and index.
- ISBN:
- 9780814213001
- 0814213006
- 9780814252673
- 0814252672
- OCLC:
- 926823048
The Penn Libraries is committed to describing library materials using current, accurate, and responsible language. If you discover outdated or inaccurate language, please fill out this feedback form to report it and suggest alternative language.