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Tasting Difference: Food, Race, and Cultural Encounters Early Modern Literature
Barnes and Noble
Tasting Difference: Food, Race, and Cultural Encounters Early Modern Literature
Current price: $42.95
Barnes and Noble
Tasting Difference: Food, Race, and Cultural Encounters Early Modern Literature
Current price: $42.95
Size: Hardcover
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From household manuals that instructed English housewives how to use newly imported foodstuffs to "the spicèd Indian air" of
, from the repurposing of Othello as an early modern pitchman for coffee in ballads to the performance of disgust in travel narratives, Shahani shows how early modern genres negotiated the allure and danger of foreign tastes.
Turning maxims such as "We are what we eat" on their head, Shahani asks how did
(the colonized subjects) become what
(the colonizing subjects) eat? How did we become alternately the object of fear and appetite, loathing and craving? Shahani takes us back several centuries to the process by which food came to be inscribed with racial character and the racial other came to be marked as edible, showing how the racializing of food began in an era well before chicken tikka masala and Balti cuisine. Bringing into conversation critical paradigms in early modern studies, food studies, and postcolonial studies, she argues that it is in the writing on food and eating that we see among the earliest configurations of racial difference, and it is experienced both as a different taste and as a taste of difference.