Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
5. Udupi Hotels: Entrepreneurship, Reform, and Revival
-
Stig Toft Madsen
and Geoffrey Gardella
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
-
Part One. Opening the Issues
- 1. Introduction 3
- 2. A Different History of the Present: The Movement of Crops, Cuisines, and Globalization 29
-
Part Two. The Princely-Colonial Encounter and the Nationalist Response
- 3. Cosmopolitan Kitchens: Cooking for Princely Zenanas in Late Colonial India 49
- 4. Nation on a Platter: The Culture and Politics of Food and Cuisine in Colonial Bengal 73
-
Part Three. Cities, Middle Classes, and Public Cultures of Eating
- 5. Udupi Hotels: Entrepreneurship, Reform, and Revival 91
- 6. Dum Pukht: A Pseudo-Historical Cuisine 110
- 7. “Teaching Modern India How to Eat”: “Authentic” Foodways and Regimes of Exclusion in Affluent Mumbai 126
- 8. “Going for an Indian”: South Asian Restaurants and the Limits of Multiculturalism in Britain 143
- 9. Global Flows, Local Bodies: Dreams of Pakistani Grill in Manhattan 175
- 10. From Curry Mahals to Chaat Cafés: Spatialities of the South Asian Culinary Landscape 196
- 11. Masala Matters: Globalization, Female Food Entrepreneurs, and the Changing Politics of Provisioning 219
- Postscript. Globalizing South Asian Food Cultures: Earlier Stops to New Horizons 237
- References 255
- Contributors 299
- Index 303
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
-
Part One. Opening the Issues
- 1. Introduction 3
- 2. A Different History of the Present: The Movement of Crops, Cuisines, and Globalization 29
-
Part Two. The Princely-Colonial Encounter and the Nationalist Response
- 3. Cosmopolitan Kitchens: Cooking for Princely Zenanas in Late Colonial India 49
- 4. Nation on a Platter: The Culture and Politics of Food and Cuisine in Colonial Bengal 73
-
Part Three. Cities, Middle Classes, and Public Cultures of Eating
- 5. Udupi Hotels: Entrepreneurship, Reform, and Revival 91
- 6. Dum Pukht: A Pseudo-Historical Cuisine 110
- 7. “Teaching Modern India How to Eat”: “Authentic” Foodways and Regimes of Exclusion in Affluent Mumbai 126
- 8. “Going for an Indian”: South Asian Restaurants and the Limits of Multiculturalism in Britain 143
- 9. Global Flows, Local Bodies: Dreams of Pakistani Grill in Manhattan 175
- 10. From Curry Mahals to Chaat Cafés: Spatialities of the South Asian Culinary Landscape 196
- 11. Masala Matters: Globalization, Female Food Entrepreneurs, and the Changing Politics of Provisioning 219
- Postscript. Globalizing South Asian Food Cultures: Earlier Stops to New Horizons 237
- References 255
- Contributors 299
- Index 303