Synopses & Reviews
It seems that everyone today is fascinated by food. Literature and popular culture prove it. We face an ever-expanding pantry of culinary poems, memoirs, histories and travelogues, not to mention polemics debating the politics of the table, analysing the medical rights and wrongs of eating, and investigating the morality of the contemporary food chain. Visual artists have long focused on still lifes of food; now films and television programmes glamourise cooks, cooking and eating.
Review
"It is hard to imagine how Sandra Gilbert could have produced so broad an overview of contemporary food writing and thought, not only literary analysis but also history, memoir ("foodoir!"), and bibliography. Anyone wanting an introduction to the meaning of food culture should start here." Marion Nestle, professor of nutrition, food studies, and public health at New York University, and author of Eat Drink Vote
Review
"A rich and tasty dish of cultural history, gastronomical ethnology, literary criticism, and memoir...flavored with Gilbert's characteristic blend of erudition and humor, warmth and wisdom. I learned something from every delicious page." Elaine Showalter
Review
"Wonderful... shows us how food can be, and has been, transformed through history into memory, myth, language, and image as different artists explore the subject in different forms. This is a tour of our daily lives with a radiant light cast on our most essential item." Eavan Boland
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"Sandra M. Gilbert brings her legendary powers of discernment and analytical gusto to the urgent subject of food, and the results--lushly entertaining, salty with anecdote and wisdom--have lyrical savor and a tenderly autobiographical richness." Wayne Koestenbaum
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"I love --it's so funny, foodie, learned, and personal at the same time. It shines with joy!" Diane Johnson
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"A rich, powerful, important delight of a book to mull over both for its splendid insights but also to use for years to come as a guidebook into the most important writing about food both now and in the past." Louise DeSalvo
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"[Gilbert's] evocative prose and shrewd analyses make for an intellectual feast." Publishers Weekly
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" is a meticulously researched and wonderfully written examination of how food is at the heart of our cultural identity. From Shakespeare to Pablo Neruda to Gertrude Stein, Andy Warhol to Wayne Thiebaud, Gilbert skillfully follows the thread of gastronomy through history, art, literature, and pop culture with a scholar and poet's eye for detail and meaning." Alice Waters
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"Feminist scholar and poet Sandra M. Gilberi dishes with gusto on our romance with food." Lisa Shea
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"There is something puzzling about our obsession with imaginary food, as Gilbert's book fascinatingly explores." Elle
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"An ambitious undertaking... [Gilbert's] book is packed with literary references, from Plato to Emily Dickinson and Margaret Atwood. The best bits, though, are her memories of growing up in 1960s New York in an Italian-Russian immigrant family." Be Wilson The New Yorker
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"A banquet of ideas... deliciously, deeply satisfying." The Economist
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"A lovely blend of the personal, the artistic and the political." Kate Tuttle Boston Sunday Globe
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"A testament to [Gilbert's] wide-ranging curiosity and enthusiasm for her subject." Erica Wagner Financial Times
Synopsis
From the recipe novel to the celebrity chef, renowned scholar Sandra M. Gilbert explores the poetics and politics of food.
Synopsis
What does it mean to transform raw stuff into cooked dishes, which then become part of our own bodies; to savor festive meals yet resolve to renounce gluttony; to act as predators where in another life we might have become prey? Do the rituals of the kitchen have different meanings for men and women, for professional chefs and home cooks? Why, today, do so many of us turn so passionately toward table topics, on the page, online, and on screen? What are the philosophical implications of the food chain on which we all find ourselves InThe Culinary Imagination, Gilbert addresses these powerful questions through meditations on myths and memoirs, children s books, novels, poems, food blogs, paintings, TV shows, and movies. Discussing figures from Rex Stout to Julia Child and Andy Warhol, from M. F. K. Fisher and Sylvia Plath to Alice Waters and Peter Singer, she analyzes the politics and poetics of our daily bread, investigating our complex self-definitions as producers, consumers, and connoisseurs of food. The result is an ambitious, lively, and learned examination of the ways in which our culture s artists have represented food across a range of genres. "
Synopsis
In this stunning and important work, the prominent critic, poet, and memoirist Sandra M. Gilbert explores our relationship with food and eating through discussions of literature, art, and popular culture. Focusing on contemporary practices, traces the social, aesthetic, and political history of food from myth to modernity, from ancient sources to our current wave of food mania.
About the Author
Sandra M. Gilbert has published numerous volumes of criticism