Feasting Our Eyes
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Laura Lindenfeld
and Fabio Parasecoli
About this book
Author / Editor information
Fabio Parasecoli is associate professor and director of food studies initiatives at the New School in New York City. Recent books include Bite me! Food in Popular Culture (2008); the six-volume Cultural History of Food, coedited with Peter Scholliers (2012); and Al Dente: A History of Food in Italy (2014).
Reviews
Going beyond the obvious "good to eat, good to watch" analysis, Lindenfeld and Parasecoli offer both close-up and wide angle views on food and film, consolidating their considerable expertise to explore the aspirations and contradictions in American cinema. From Big Night to Ratatoille to Food, Inc, the authors unpack visual narratives to show how the desire for belonging in multicultural nations is often at odds with the commodification of authenticity and identity. This is one of the very few books to capture the complications of pleasure and oppression, particularly by noting the absence of labor and the need for reconciliatory, successful happy endings, where food soothes the challenges and disruptions to gender, race, and class hierarchies through consumption.
Signe Rousseau, author of Food and Social Media: You Are What You Tweet:
Feasting Our Eyes offers an engaging new perspective on "food films," and how they are often as interesting for what they omit as what they include when it comes to representations of cultural identity. Highly recommended reading.
Amy Bentley, author of Inventing Baby Food: Taste, Health and the Industrialization of the American Diet:
Feasting Our Eyes is a marvel. From the indie classic Babette's Feast to Disney's blockbuster Ratatouille, Lindenfeld and Parasecoli map the origins and evolution of American food films, revealing their ability to reflect and shape our corporeal, emotional, and gustatory desires.
Kathleen LeBesco, author of Revolting Bodies? The Struggle to Redefine Fat Identity:
Feasting Our Eyes offers a thorough and thoughtful examination of food films at the nexus of consumption and citizenship. Lindenfeld & Parasecoli authoritatively argue that food films, although apparently progressive, in fact reinforce the very cultural and social dynamics they wish to critique. Decisive and taut, the book is a must-read.
Peter Naccarato, co-author of Edible Ideologies: Representing Food and Meaning:
In Feasting Our Eyes: Food Films and Cultural Identity in the United States, Laura Lindenfeld and Fabio Parasecoli offer a comprehensive study of food films. They frame their discussion around multiple themes that connect food films to identity formation in the United States including race, ethnicity, gender, and sexuality. It is an essential read for all interested in the intersections of food, media, and identity.
Topics
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Frontmatter
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Contents
v -
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Illustrations
vii -
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Acknowledgments
ix -
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Introduction
1 -
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1. Food Films and Consumption: Selling Big Night
33 -
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2. Autonomy in the Kitchen? Food Films and Postfeminism
63 -
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3. Magical Food, Luscious Bodies
93 -
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4. Culinary Comfort: Th e Satiating Construction of Masculinity
119 -
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5. When Weirdos Stir the Pot: Cooking Identity in Animated Movies
147 -
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6. Consuming the Other: Food Films as Culinary Tourism
175 -
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Conclusion
205 -
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Notes
219 -
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Bibliography
235 -
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Index
249