Suny Press
Scenes of the Apple
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Edited by:
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About this book
Examines the rich and multiple meanings of food in women's writing.
Examines the rich and multiple meanings of food in women's writing.
Focusing on women's writing of the last two centuries, Scenes of the Apple traces the intricate relationship between food and body image for women. Ranging over a variety of genres, including novels, culinary memoirs, and essays, the contributors explore works by a diverse group of writers, including Mary Elizabeth Braddon, Toni Morrison, Tsitsi Dangarembga, and Jeanette Winterson, as well as such nonliterary documents as discussions of Queen Victoria's appetite and news coverage of suffragettes' hunger strikes. Moreover, in addressing works by Hispanic, African, African American, Jewish, and lesbian writers, the book explodes the myth that only white, privileged, and heterosexual women are concerned with body image, and shows the many cultural contexts in which food and cooking are important in women's literature. Above all, the essays pay tribute to the rich and multiple meanings of food in women's writing as a symbol for all kinds of delightful-and transgressive-desires.
Author / Editor information
Tamar Heller is Associate Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the University of Cincinnati. She is the author of Dead Secrets: Wilkie Collins and the Female Gothic and coeditor (with Diane Long Hoeveler) of Approaches to Teaching Gothic Fiction: The British and American Traditions. Patricia Moran is Associate Professor of English at the University of California at Davis and the author of Word of Mouth: Body Language in Katherine Mansfield and Virginia Woolf.
Topics
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Front Matter
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Contents
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Illustrations
vii -
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Acknowledgments
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Introduction Scenes of the Apple: Appetite, Desire, Writing
1 - Appetite and Consumption in Nineteenth-Century Cultural Politics
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Good and Plenty: Queen Victoria Figures the Imperial Body
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Ingestion, Contagion, Seduction: Victorian Metaphors of Reading
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Consuming Images: Women, Hunger, and the Vote
87 - Grotesque, Ghostly, and Cannibalistic Hunger in Twentieth-Century Texts
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“The Courage of Her Appetites”: The Ambivalent Grotesque in Ellen Glasgow’s Romantic Comedians
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“Death Is a Skipped Meal Compared to This”: Food and Hunger in Toni Morrison’s Beloved
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“There is No God Who can Keep us from Tasting”:Good Cannibalism in Hélène Cixous’s The Book of Promethea
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“I Cannot Eat My Words but I Do”: Food, Body, and Word in the Novels of Jeanette Winterson
167 - Food and Cooking: Patriarchal, Colonial, Familial Structures
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Rewriting the Hysteric as Anorexic in Tsitsi Dangarembga’s Nervous Conditions
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Latin American Women Writers’ Novel Recipes and Laura Esquivel’s Like Water for Chocolate
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“A Sinkside, Stoveside, Personal Perspective”: Female Authority and Kitchen Space in Contemporary Women’s Writing
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Contributors
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Index
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