Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) A. Appadurai
ANO 1988
TIPO Artigo
PERIÓDICO Comparative Studies in Society and History
ISSN 0010-4175
E-ISSN 1475-2999
EDITORA Elsevier (Netherlands)
DOI 10.1017/s0010417500015024
CITAÇÕES 87
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-18
MD5 03d7ed3f5cf3975aa8dc417c8a46d294

Resumo

Cookbooks, which usually belong to the humble literature of complex civilizations, tell unusual cultural tales. They combine the sturdy pragmatic virtues of all manuals with the vicarious pleasures of the literature of the senses. They reflect shifts in the boundaries of edibility, the proprieties of the culinary process, the logic of meals, the exigencies of the household budget, the vagaries of the market, and the structure of domestic ideologies. The existence of cookbooks presupposes not only some degree of literacy, but often an effort on the part of some variety of specialist to standardize the regime of the kitchen, to transmit culinary lore, and to publicize particular traditions guid- ing the journey of food from marketplace to kitchen to table. Insofar as cookbooks reflect the kind of technical and cultural elaboration we grace with the term cuisine, they are likely, as Jack Goody has recently argued, to be representations not only of structures of production and distribution and of social and cosmological schemes, but of class and hierarchy (1982). Their spread is an important sign of what Norbert Elias has called 'the civilizing process' (1978). The increased interest of historians and anthropologists in cookbooks should therefore come as no surprise (Chang 1977; Cosman 1976; Khare 1976a, 1976b).

Ferramentas