Cookbooks are Our Texts: Reading An Immigrant Community Through their Cookbooks

Cookbooks are more than mere devices for presenting recipes. They inform the practice of cooking and much more. They contain information about ethnic identity, treasured folklore, gender patterns, and religious performances. They are chronicles of public and personal record. Importantly, food cultur...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Religious studies and theology
Main Author: Joseph, Norma Baumel (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Equinox Publ. 2016
In: Religious studies and theology
Further subjects:B cultural memory
B receipes
B immigrant community
B religon
B Iraqi Jews
B Foodways
B Kosher
B Gender
B Identity
B cookbooks
Online Access: Volltext (lizenzpflichtig)
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Summary:Cookbooks are more than mere devices for presenting recipes. They inform the practice of cooking and much more. They contain information about ethnic identity, treasured folklore, gender patterns, and religious performances. They are chronicles of public and personal record. Importantly, food cultures not only strengthen a community’s group patterns, they also sustain those configurations longer than most other customs. But food is ephemeral; it is filled with meaning and then disappears. Cookbooks endure displaying social patterns and cultural meaning. In this essay, the examination of a succession of Iraqi Jewish cookbooks exposes patterns of adjustment and conservation as the community flees its homeland and settles in Montreal, Canada.
ISSN:1747-5414
Contains:Enthalten in: Religious studies and theology
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1558/rsth.32556