Women's Work: How Culinary Cultures Shaped Modern Spain

Women's Work: How Culinary Cultures Shaped Modern Spain

by Rebecca Ingram
Women's Work: How Culinary Cultures Shaped Modern Spain

Women's Work: How Culinary Cultures Shaped Modern Spain

by Rebecca Ingram

Hardcover

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Overview

Winner, Gourmand World Cookbook Awards, 2023—Best Women of the World Book, Spain

We are living in a moment in which famous chefs, Michelin stars, culinary techniques, and gastronomical accolades attract moneyed tourists to Spain from all over the world. This has prompted the Spanish government to declare its cuisine as part of Spanish patrimony. Even with this widespread global attention, we know little about how Spanish cooking became a litmus test for demonstrating Spain's modernity and, relatedly, the roles ascribed to the modern Spanish women responsible for daily cooking.

Efforts to articulate a new, modern Spain infiltrated writing in multiple genres and media. Women's Work offers a sharp reading of diverse sources, placed in their historical context, that yields a better understanding of the roles of food within an inherently uneven modernization process. Further, author Rebecca Ingram's perceptive critique reveals the paradoxical messages women have navigated, even in texts about a daily practice that shaped their domestic and work lives. Women's Work posits that this is significant because of the degree to which domestic activities, including cooking, occupied women's daily lives, even while issues like their fitness as citizens and participation in the public sphere were hotly debated. At the same time, progressive intellectuals from diverse backgrounds began to invoke Spanish cooking and eating as one measure of Spanish modernity.

Women's Work shows how culinary writing engaged these debates and reached women at the site of much of their daily labor—the kitchen—and, in this way, shaped their thinking about their roles in modernizing Spain.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780826504906
Publisher: Vanderbilt University Press
Publication date: 09/15/2022
Pages: 220
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

Rebecca Ingram is a professor of Spanish at the University of San Diego.

Table of Contents

Introduction
Chapter 1: Emilia Pardo Bazán: Culinary Nationalist and Ambivalent Feminist
Chapter 2: Frivolous and Feminist: Carmen de Burgos’s Culinary-Political Platform
Chapter 3: Mythologies of Culinary Modernity: Gregorio Marañón and Nicolasa Pradera
Chapter 4: Cooking and Civic Virtue: Women, Work, and Barcelona
Conclusion: Feminist Food Studies and Spain
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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