Preview

Food and Culture

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
514 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Food and Culture
SeongEun Hyun (Réa)
LTCS 52
Professor Ping-Hui Liao
26 April 2013
Commentary #2 Anne Allison points out an interesting point about the relationship between food and Japanese women in her article “Japanese Mothers and Obentos: The Lunch-Box as Ideological State Apparatus”. She has insightful and different point of view of obento, a japanese lunch box which are highly crafted elaborations of food, that it is endowed with “ideological and gendered meanings” under state ideology (155). That is, both mother and child are being watched, judged, and constructed by society since making a good obento may please her child and also affirm that she is a good mother, and child consuming their entire meal in a appropriate manner is considered well-taught. This social phenomenon represents that culture is constructed with power which exerts a force which operates in ways that are subtle, disguised, and accepted as everyday social practice. Another essay Carole Counihan’s “Mexicanas’ Food Voice and Differential Consciousness in the San Luis Valley of Colorado” uses the case of Ryubal to suggest how women can display differential consciousness through their practices and beliefs surrounding food. In society where traditional division of labor in cooking is still prevalent, a Mexican women Helen Ryubal challenged the traditional views of women and cooking by rejecting cooking, making husbands respect women who cooked, and involving husband in cooking. Her strategy not only minimized the subordinating dimensions of reproductive labor but also valued and benefited from the help of her mother, sister, and husband. Her attempt has been based on her ideologies which was developed from differential consciousness which is “a key strategy used by dominated peoples to survive demeaning and disempowering structures and ideologies” (175). Both essays are focusing on the relationship between food and gender through each case. Allison considered obentos as a container of cultural meanings,

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    This is an article among many others which address the different themes throughout Like Water for Chocolate. Specifically focusing on the deferred norms of women. Janice A. Jaffe supports her findings by comparing Esquivel’s work to Helena Maria Viramontes who also creative process was in context with cooking and being in the kitchen. This essay is written to depict the work of Esquivel in relation to others workings including women and their role in the Kitchen how that influenced the book itself. Throughout the article there are a wide range of scholarly people who either…

    • 334 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Additionally, both authors discuss food in a manner that acts as a springboard to analyzing food’s cross-cultural dimensions. Rice is, admittedly, a basic food in the Eastern world. However, “Rice Culture” tell us how Dash and Aunt Gertie cook rice American style. “Before cooking, Aunt Gertie would wash her…

    • 1249 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    World Cultures 2

    • 1473 Words
    • 6 Pages

    While his coworkers constructed his designs, what hobby did Bernini pursue? Answer Selected Answer: Correct Answer: Writing plays and designing stage sets Writing plays and designing stage sets…

    • 1473 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Best Essays

    Michael Pollan in 2006, published a work that has to some degree changed the way that people eat, or at the very least attempted to change the way that we think about the food we eat. (Shea 54) Pollan demonstrates through fundamentally modern rhetoric the relationship that people, and more specifically American’s have with food and how very distant we are from it. ("History, Old Favorites in" B08) To some degree Pollan, others like him and internationally challenging food shortages and even worse food born illnesses and scares are changing the way that food is understood with regard to an international and national food traceability and accountability movement. (Popper 365) Pollan challenges the “industrial food chain” looking at ingredients, finished food products and other issues to try to source out the distance between man and his or her food. His investment in the idea goes much further as he explores through rhetoric several scenarios regarding obtaining and cooking meals. Those scenarios including attempting to show American’s a better way, or at least shock us out of our food stupor by first enjoying a meal from McDonalds (sourcing it almost exclusively to corn an overused and bizarre food product and petroleum products), producing a meal from a famous “organic” food retailer, challenging this niche industry. The third meal is a meal made from only items found on a utopian Virginian farm, and then Pollan produces a meal from only foraging. Through all these scenarios he explores, from a very basic standpoint, all the inaccuracies, misrepresentations and challenges that our food industry places on the ethic of living on the earth and sharing it with others.…

    • 2818 Words
    • 12 Pages
    Best Essays
  • Good Essays

    Growing up in twenty-first century America I have always eaten the way I'm “supposed” to; I never gave it a second thought. My culture has almost given me tunnel vision, letting me focus only on what I know as acceptable or natural. This topic opens my mind to what else I might be blinded to. I have never explored what other cultures grow accustomed to like religion, style, relationships, family dynamics or even school. I have always considered myself incredibly fortunate for the life I live, and therefore I never examined the varying cultural aspects of differing nations or people groups. As far as the message of society erasing the intimacy of our meals to ourselves, I can absolutely sympathize with the author’s thoughts. In retrospect, the singular thing that could most certainly bring my family together was the warm meal that awaited us. The physicality of sharing a meal together provided each of us the opportunities to engage, with every member of my family, our singular…

    • 508 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    1.1 The eat well plate shows the different types of food we need to eat and in what proportions to have a well-balanced and healthy diet.…

    • 302 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Whole Foods has many intriguing aspects as an organization. Cultural values, employee appreciation, and the idea of being conscious of healthy living and eating are factors that make Whole Foods appealing to work for. This appeal is sure to draw the attention of a variety of candidates; embracing and utilizing diversity is a characteristic of strength that most companies haven’t mastered yet.…

    • 346 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Fast Food Culture

    • 1520 Words
    • 7 Pages

    America has been encountering many different types of cultures since it was first founded. These distinct types of cultures lead to the development of various types of food options. However, fast food productions stood out to be the top meal choice. The reason for this expansion of encounters with fast food has to deal with the American desire to gain more material wealth and become more prosperous. Americans expanded their encounters with fast foods by means of franchising, advertising, and processing of foods to help them acquire the wealth that they desire.…

    • 1520 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the present time the African American culture changed quite a bit in being removed from where they as a people originated or should I say their homeland from whence they came. African American people are a people who are influenced tremendously from their fore fathers and mothers who lived in the southern part of the United States. The nomenclature for this group is to include African American, Black Americans or people of color. I prefer to use African American at this time since I am preferably writing about my own cultural background.…

    • 810 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Different cultures around the world have their own types of customs that they are used to having. There are many types of diets that different cultures are used to having that unlike those of what we are used to here in the United States. In many cultures people eat toasted ants, frog legs, puppies, kittens, or raw monkey brains. I could never find myself eating none of the above, but this is natural for many people around the world. Each part of the world contains people who function differently, have symbols that have different meaning as well as have their conflicts. When applying the concept that people live different lives and eat different things, the concepts of ethnocentrism and cultural relativism come into play for each type of custom. We judge those that have different ways of living as weird, nasty and strange while they think of our ways of living as the same. This essay also discusses the three major sociological theories: functionalism, conflict theory, and interactionism for the analysis of ethnocentrism and cultural relativism.…

    • 1311 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Health and Culture

    • 2137 Words
    • 9 Pages

    Use the four factors from Willis' (2004, as cited in Germov, 2009, p. 6) sociological imagination template to gain background information to analyse the question.…

    • 2137 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    To give a background of the next author, his name is Carlo Petrini; he was born in Cuneo, Italy in 1949. Petrini studied sociology in Trento, Italy, and is one of the biggest people in the campaign for slow cooked food, he is also the editor of Slow Food Nation. The second article is Petrini’s “Excerpt from Slow Food: The Case for Taste”. Petrini’s article discuses how we as people have sold out to society’s way of producing food the…

    • 1690 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    In a Praise of Food

    • 816 Words
    • 4 Pages

    In “In a praise of Fast Food,” Laudan reports the disaster of modern, fast and process foods. Laudan states that at least, it is the message by newspapers, magazines and in cookbooks. Lauden explained her own experience on culinary art where according to the article her culinary style, like so many people was created by those who scorned industrialized food or culinary Luddites.…

    • 816 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Gender is a particularly relevant subject in today’s culture, and Japan is undoubtedly part of the conversation. During the 1980s, Japan had a wave of economic boom and developments that still continue now. With it came the shifting mindsets and societal beliefs. Kitchen is a novella that brings great focus onto this progression in history through the lens of gender fluidity. Yoshimoto uses her characters as a way to express the emotions of the people who lived through the postmodern era.…

    • 1072 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Diluting Traditions

    • 654 Words
    • 3 Pages

    “All I could think of was that she would make me eat mayonnaise, a food I identified with the United States and which I detested. Mami understood, of course, that I wasn’t used to that kind of food” (Alvarez,1992).…

    • 654 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays

Related Topics