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The Ethics of Food - - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

Nomadic Food - - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

Food and Place - - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

Food on Film - - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

Interpreting Food at Museums and Historic Sites - Michelle Moon - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

Interpreting Food at Museums and Historic Sites - Michelle Moon - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

Food is such a friendly topic that it’s often thought of as a “hook” for engaging visitors – a familiar way into other topics, or a sensory element to round out a living history interpretation. But it’s more than just a hook – it’s a topic all its own, with its own history and its own uncertain future, deserving of a central place in historic interpretation. With audiences more interested in food than ever before, and new research in food studies bringing interdisciplinary approaches to this complicated but compelling subject, museums and historic sites have an opportunity to draw new audiences and infuse new meaning into their food presentations. You’ll find:·A comprehensive, thematic framework of key concepts that will help you contextualize food history interpretations;·A concise, evaluative review of the historiography of food interpretation;·Case studies featuring the expression of these themes in the real world of museum interpretation; and·Best practices for interpreting food. Interpreting Food offers a framework for understanding the big ideas in food history, suggesting best practices for linking objects, exhibits and demonstrations with the larger story of change in food production and consumption over the past two centuries – a story in which your visitors can see themselves, and explore their own relationships to food. This book can help you develop food interpretation with depth and significance, making relevant connections to contemporary issues and visitor interests.

DKK 388.00
3

Interpreting Food at Museums and Historic Sites - Michelle Moon - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

Interpreting Food at Museums and Historic Sites - Michelle Moon - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

Food is such a friendly topic that it’s often thought of as a “hook” for engaging visitors – a familiar way into other topics, or a sensory element to round out a living history interpretation. But it’s more than just a hook – it’s a topic all its own, with its own history and its own uncertain future, deserving of a central place in historic interpretation. With audiences more interested in food than ever before, and new research in food studies bringing interdisciplinary approaches to this complicated but compelling subject, museums and historic sites have an opportunity to draw new audiences and infuse new meaning into their food presentations. You’ll find:·A comprehensive, thematic framework of key concepts that will help you contextualize food history interpretations;·A concise, evaluative review of the historiography of food interpretation;·Case studies featuring the expression of these themes in the real world of museum interpretation; and·Best practices for interpreting food. Interpreting Food at Museums and Historic Sites offers a framework for understanding the big ideas in food history, suggesting best practices for linking objects, exhibits and demonstrations with the larger story of change in food production and consumption over the past two centuries – a story in which your visitors can see themselves, and explore their own relationships to food. This book can help you develop food interpretation with depth and significance, making relevant connections to contemporary issues and visitor interests.

DKK 742.00
3

Food Supply Protection and Homeland Security - Frank R. Spellman

Nomadic Food - - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

Nomadic Food - - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

Food is unquestionably a total social fact and ''we must now think of it as a social fact that is characteristic of new global lifestyles'' (Rasse and Debos, 2006). The structural organization of the market and eating behaviors are undergoing great changes. Strictly speaking, this development is not really new. Every century, every major caesura in the history of humanity could illustrate a process of inventions, adaptations, and innovations which have transformed eating habits. The contemporary period, however, is different because of the extent of these major changes and the global importance of some of them. Thus, organizations such as manufacturers, retailers, and transportation companies are all highly inventive in offering individuals eating solutions which are adapted to their new lifestyles; lifestyles which are based or, at the very least, affected by increased mobility and continuous moving around. Of course, travelers have made journeys throughout history, and they have always had to deal with the issue of how to eat when away from home. Whether associated with long-distance journeys, random travels, or tourist trips, mobility has been an important factor in the creation of catering and eating solutions which range from the very simple to the elaborate. Today, this increased mobility makes us think of practices which have been described as nomadic. However, can a link be found between the nomadism of people who move around in order to find food for their herds or for themselves and the nomadic forms of eating of our mobile societies? The collection of contributions that we are proposing will try to provide answers to this.The traditional understanding of the concept of nomadism generally refers to pastoral practices which are to be found in many populations such as the Lapps, the peoples of Central Asia,or the Tuaregs. The term ''nomadism'' is also used to describe the lives of hunter-gatherers and some sea nomads, such as the Bajau of Indonesia, and the Moken, the Moklen, and the Urak Lawoi of Thailand. It has also been used to refer to gypsies, or Roma, who, since a French law of 1969, have been called ''gens du voyage'' (travelers). Although mobility is an invariant in these different types, it is nonetheless true that the term refers to the ways of life lead by organized social groups who are the bearers of a specific identity. However, it is impossible to simply correlate these nomadic practices with the habit of food consumption outside the home or living place since nomads do not have any home other than where they stop on a temporary basis. The concept of nomadism has undergone profound changes in recent decades, taking on a semantic scope that gives it the ability to just as easily include working practices, communication processes, and new forms of social behavior.In this book, we intend to examine the many meanings of the term ''nomad'' through the study of food habits. Food and beverage products have become just as nomadic as other objects, such as telephones and computers, whereas in the past only food and money were able to move about with their carriers. Food industries have seized control of this trend to make it the characteristic feature of consumption outside the home - always faster and more convenient, the just-in-time meal: ''what I want, when I want, where I want'', snacks, finger food, and street food. The terms reveal the contemporary modernity and spread of food practices, but they are only modified versions of older and more uncommon forms of behavior. Mobility, in the sense of multiple forms of moving about using public or individual, and possibly intermodal, means of transport, on spatial scales and temporal rhythms which are frequent and recurring but variable, responding to professional or leisure needs, can serve as a basic premise in order to gain insight into the concept of food nomadism.Have we passed from a group and territorially-defined way of eating to a solitary and mobile, so-called nomadic way of eating? This vision connecting mobility and freedom is a little far-fetched for several reasons. Firstly, the food of the nomads is not nomadic. Within the context of traditional nomadism, people move about but they always eat inside their habitat, which is itself mobile. On the other hand, the ideology of Western modernity goes together with the ideology of movement, which is itself deeply linked to a perception of time. In this approach, space is not only territory, it is also space-time. Sedentary people, whether by choice or time constraints and pendular migrations, have to live, think and eat ''nomad''.In a multi-author work published in 2002, the authors distinguished two forms of mobility: moving about in order to do one''s shopping, and moving about in order to have meals away from one''s home. In the first case, they saw a sedentary specificity, whereas in the second they saw a ''nomadic'' (in quotation marks) specificity. This latter was linked to a so-

DKK 848.00
3

Regulating Food Additives - Joan Price Bayer - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

A Taste of Broadway - Jennifer Packard - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

Food Cults - Kima Cargill - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

Food Cults - Kima Cargill - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

What do we mean when we call any group a cult? Defining that term is a slippery proposition – the word cult is provocative and arguably pejorative. Does it necessarily refer to a religious group? A group with a charismatic leader? Or something darker and more sinister? Because beliefs and practices surrounding food often inspire religious and political fervor, as well as function to unite people into insular groups, it is inevitable that "food cults" would emerge. Studying the extreme beliefs and practices of such food cults allows us to see the ways in which food serves as a nexus for religious beliefs, sexuality, death anxiety, preoccupation with the body, asceticism, and hedonism, to name a few. In contrast to religious and political cults, food cults have the added dimension of mediating cultural trends in nutrition and diet through their membership. Should we then consider raw foodists, many of whom believe that cooked food is poison, a type of food cult? What about paleo diet adherents or those who follow a restricted calorie diet for longevity? Food Cults explores these questions by looking at domestic and international, contemporary and historic food communities characterized by extreme nutritional beliefs or viewed as "fringe" movements by mainstream culture. While there are a variety of accounts of such food communities across disciplines, this collection pulls together these works and explains why we gravitate toward such groups and the social and psychological functions they serve. This volume describes how contemporary and historic food communities come together and foment fanaticism, judgment, charisma, dogma, passion, longevity, condemnation and exaltation.

DKK 839.00
3

The Food Section - Kimberly Wilmot Voss - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

The Food Section - Kimberly Wilmot Voss - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

Food blogs are everywhere today but for generations, information and opinions about food were found in the food sections of newspapers in communities large and small. Until the early 1970s, these sections were housed in the women’s pages of newspapers—where women could hold an authoritative voice. The food editors—often a mix of trained journalist and home economist—reported on everything from nutrition news to features on the new chef in town. They wrote recipes and solicited ideas from readers. The sections reflected the trends of the time and the cooks of the community. The editors were local celebrities, judging cooking contests and getting calls at home about how to prepare a Thanksgiving turkey. They were consumer advocates and reporters for food safety and nutrition. They helped make James Beard and Julia Child household names as the editors wrote about their television appearances and reviewed their cookbooks.These food editors laid the foundation for the food community that Nora Ephron described in her classic 1968 essay, “The Food Establishment,” and eventually led to the food communities of today. Included in the chapters are profiles of such food editors as Jane Nickerson, Jeanne Voltz, and Ruth Ellen Church, who were unheralded pioneers in the field, as well as Cecily Brownstone, Poppy Cannon, and Clementine Paddleford, who are well known today; an analysis of their work demonstrates changes in the country’s culinary history. The book concludes with a look at how the women’s pages folded at the same time that home economics saw its field transformed and with thoughts about the foundation that these women laid for the food journalism of today.

DKK 509.00
3

Portland - Heather Arndt Anderson - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

Portland - Heather Arndt Anderson - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

The infant city called The Clearing was a bald patch amid a stuttering wood. The Clearing was no booming metropolis; no destination for gastrotourists; no career-changer for ardent chefs — just awkward, palsied steps toward Victorian gentility. In the decades before the remaining trees were scraped from the landscape, Portland’s wood was still a verdant breadbasket, overflowing with huckleberries and chanterelles, venison leaping on cloven hoof. Today, Portland is seen as a quaint village populated by trust fund wunderkinds who run food carts each serving something more precious than the last. But Portland’s culinary history actually tells a different story: the tales of the salmon-people, the pioneers and immigrants, each struggling to make this strange but inviting land between the Pacific and the Cascades feel like home. The foods that many people associate with Portland are derived from and defined by its history: salmon, berries, hazelnuts and beer. But Portland is more than its ingredients. Portland is an eater’s paradise and a cook’s playground. Portland is a gustatory wonderland. Full of wry humor and captivating anecdotes, Portland: A Food Biography chronicles the Rose City’s rise from a muddy Wild West village full of fur traders, lumberjacks and ne’er-do-wells, to a progressive, bustling town of merchants, brewers and oyster parlors, to the critical darling of the national food scene. Heather Arndt Anderson brings to life in lively prose the culinary landscape of Portland, then and now.

DKK 480.00
3