Synopses & Reviews
The development of romantic love, the evolution of national and regional cuisines, the globalization of Chinese food, the histories of various taboos on certain types of food and drink, the uniqueness of the European family—such are the fascinating and diverse themes Goody addresses in
Food and Love.
Starting with a sustained discussion of the debates on social development in the thought of classic theorists as well as contemporary historical and sociological notions of modernization, Goody goes on to tease out the general historical processes embedded in the most intimate recesses of our lives. In a final bracing section challenging dominant relativist conceptions, Goody considers the difficulties and complexities of cross cultural and comparative analysis, and he picks apart the doubts involved in the very process of representation and symbolic communication.
Throughout this collection, Goody demonstrates that the ethnocentricity of much of Western scholarship has distorted not only the comprehension of the East but also developments in the European past and present.
Synopsis
Drawing out the historical processes embedded in the most intimate recesses of our live, from a thinker who enjoys subverting neat simplifications and rigid preconceptions.
Synopsis
In Food and Love, Jack Goody surveys phenomena as diverse as the uniqueness of the European family, the development of romantic love, the evolution of national and regional cuisines, and the globalization of Chinese food, effortlessly incorporating fascinating examples ranging from Europe to Asia and Africa. Throughout the book, Goody shows that the ethnocentricity of much of Western scholarship has distorted not only the comprehension of the East but also of developments in Europe"s past and present.
Synopsis
A subversive thinker draws out the historical significance of the most intimate corners of our lives.
About the Author
Jack Goody is Professor of Anthropology at Cambridge University and a Fellow of St. John’s College. His publications include The East in the West, The Culture of Flowers, Cooking, Cuisine and Class, and Food and Love.