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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
31

From pickled peaches to pink poodle: What do Community Cookbooks Tells us About Foodways and Urbanization at the Turn-of-the-Century in Sacramento and Stockton, California

Helfrich, Kate 01 January 2018 (has links) (PDF)
Industrialization and rapid urbanization characterized the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries in many aspects of domestic life. Scholars have used community cookbooks to document changes in domestic roles at the turn of the twentieth century. This study uses community cookbooks to look beyond domestic roles and to trace changing foodways during the period from 1870 to 1930 in the northern Central Valley of California. Nine cookbooks from Sacramento, California and five cookbooks from Stockton, California reveal changes in foodways during this time. Recipes, text, and advertisements in these cookbooks show changes in the manner of home food production; a loss of pre-industrial food knowledge; increasing standardization in recipes and cooking knowledge; and an increasing reliance on commercially processed and name brand foods. These changes indicate a growing population and shifting demographics. The results provide insight into differences between urban and rural foodways as urban populations grow. The intrusion of industrialized food into rural home cooking may provide a backdrop for contemporary understanding of urban foodways. Researchers seeking to understand how commercial foods become entrenched in modern foodways can use community cookbooks to trace back the introduction and assimilation of commercially processed foods in the past. Rewinding the process may provide insights into a variety of issues related to processed food. In addition, this study presents a method for using community cookbooks as historical documents to trace food and foodways over time including the unique role of advertising in this context.
32

Women in Greco-Roman Jewish Novels (300 BCE-100 CE)

Fitzgerald, Katharine 11 1900 (has links)
My dissertation analyzes the portrayal of women in Jewish novels of the Greco-Roman period (300 BCE-100CE): Greek Esther, Judith, Susanna, and Aseneth. During the Greco-Roman period, the female heroine frequently became the focus in Jewish novels. This innovation coincides with a concern over maintaining Jewishness. Several areas surrounding the maintenance of social identity appear in the Jewish novels, including dietary restrictions and the preservation of the family. Although a great deal of literature exists regarding the above texts, there are currently no systematic examinations of the portrayal of women’s Jewishness in regards to the Jewish novels. My dissertation examines the portrayal of women in the Jewish novels through a literary critical approach and questions how their representation can inform scholarship on how authors depicted Jewishness during this period. This dissertation treats the Jewish novels collectively and contributes to the scholarly discussion with a systematic examination of depictions of Jewish women in these texts. Following a brief introduction in Chapter 1, where I provide an overview and assessment of earlier treatments on the Jewish novels and the topics of women and Jewishness, Chapters 2 through 5 examine the portrayal of women in the Jewish novels. These chapters are organized around four distinct aspects of Jewishness which center on the representation of the female protagonists and their relationships in the narratives: 1) the representation of women’s sexuality, 2) the preservation of foodways, 3) kinship ties, and 4) the role of the protagonist in their Jewish community. In Chapter 6, I use a comparative approach to examine the depiction of women’s Jewishness in the novels, which demonstrates women’s active roles in maintaining and defining Jewishness. Chapter 7 concludes the dissertation with a summary and recommendations for future work. / Dissertation / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) / This dissertation analyzes the portrayal of women in Jewish novels of the Greco-Roman period (300 BCE-100CE): Greek Esther, Judith, Susanna, and Aseneth. I question how women’s representation in the Jewish novels can inform scholarship on how authors depicted Jewishness during this period. The analysis of women is organized around four categories of Jewishness centered on the representation of the female protagonists and their relationships in the narratives: 1) the representation of women’s sexuality, 2) the preservation of foodways, 3) kinship ties, and 4) the role of the protagonist in their broader Jewish community. This dissertation contributes to the scholarly discussion by providing a systematic examination of depictions of Jewish women found in these texts and demonstrates that the authors of the Jewish novels depict women playing active roles in maintaining and defining Jewishness.
33

CONSUMER CHOICES IN MARTINIQUE AND SAINT-DOMINGUE: 1740-1780

Dial, Andrew 22 August 2012 (has links)
No description available.
34

The Archaeology of Food in Athens: The Development of an Athenian Urban Lifestyle

Dibble, William Flint 03 August 2010 (has links)
No description available.
35

Foodways and Socioeconomic Complexities in Early Iron Age of Bara, Old Oyo, Nigeria (ca. 490 B.C. to A.D. 40)

Oyundoyin, Racheal Bolakale 13 August 2024 (has links) (PDF)
The Early Iron Age period has been underexplored in the archaeology of West Africa, particularly Nigeria. Also, there is a lack of research and knowledge on organic residue analysis in Nigeria, particularly in the southwestern region of the country, despite the fact that other studies on archaeobotany and paleoenvironmental studies are well established. To address this gap, lipid analysis was conducted on 10 vessels from the Early Iron Age (490 B.C. to A.D. 40) site BSM6 in Bara, Old Oyo, Nigeria. The analysis revealed the plant and animal materials consumed by the Early Iron Age community. These findings provide vital insights into the dietary and subsistence practices of the period, illustrating continuities and changes in food practices from ancient to present times.
36

Eastern Shore Stories: Technology, Place, and Local Culture

Bloxom, Patricia 15 October 2012 (has links)
The Eastern Shore of Virginia is a narrow peninsula separating the Chesapeake Bay from the Atlantic Ocean. Residents of the rural counties of Accomack and Northampton County share a strong sense of cultural identity based on geography, rooted in a distinct communal sense of place reinforced by an agricultural lifestyle. Storytelling around dinner tables and on front porches at dusk, speeches at high school graduations, family recipes talked through in a grandmother’s kitchen – it is through oral language that Eastern Shore people have primarily shared the knowledge that sustains their sense of communal identity. Oral knowledge of farming techniques and land use are handed down generation by generation through material lessons in the fields and woods. The most natural and effective research method for understanding Eastern Shore culture and its peoples’ sense of place is the collection of oral histories. The interviews collected for the Eastern Shore Stories project focus on farm life on the Eastern Shore of Virginia in the mid-twentieth century, before the widespread use of electricity, tractors, or chemicals. The stories from the interviews seem quaint individually – nostalgic stories of how things used to be – but as a body of interviews, they accrue a weight and a coherence that offer interesting counterpoints to pervasive assumptions about progress and technology. It is those interesting counterpoints that this dissertation explores. This researcher expected to hear about plowing behind a team of mules and scratching out potatoes. She did not expect to hear retired farmers speak of the loneliness of modern farming, of how 2,500 acres used to support fifty families and now barely supports one. What emerged from the collective interviews was a sense that the industrialization of agriculture in this local community has caused unforeseen losses and those losses, however intangible, have been deleterious. Despite this, people from the Eastern Shore struggle to retain a sense of communal identity, defined by geography and familial connections. Their sense of belonging to this particular place persists in the face of rapid technological and cultural changes, creating tension between the place as it was and the place as it evolves in the twenty-first century.
37

Eating German, the American way: German and American cooking traditions, potato salad, and the culinary assimilation of German immigrants, 1820-1920.

Wooley, Scott 12 May 2023 (has links) (PDF)
“Eating German, the American Way” explores how and why the mayonnaise-based potato salad came to be a staple of American culinary tradition. It examines how native-born Americans and German immigrants in the nineteenth century identified themselves based on their culinary traditions and what they ate and how the interactions between, and accessibility of, those traditions created a new identity based on the sharing of recipes as the two groups mingled and assimilated to each other. It uses food as a way to understand the processes of assimilation by defining the distinctions between the two groups based on their separate repertoire of recipes, looking at the obstacles to the adoption of ingredients or techniques, and engaging with the primary sites of contact that facilitated the mixing of the cuisines to create a shared culinary identity. Cookbooks are used to establish the boundaries which defined German and American cuisine and introduce the first obstacle to be overcome, the language barrier. Magazines removed the language barrier and created the opportunity for more direct interaction between readers from both traditions, but also introduced another obstacle in the perceptions and preconceptions each group had regarding the other. Changes in the understanding of diet and nutrition in the closing decades of the century introduced another obstacle as attempts to standardize and control what Americans ate limited or excluded the contributions of immigrant groups and the language of control and standardizations reinforced preconceptions and the effects of “othering.” Restaurants and ethnic groceries functioned as the sites of direct contact, exposing native-born Americans to the food offerings of German immigrants, and providing direct access to both complete dishes and the ingredients needed to recreate them at home. As native-born Americans and German immigrants interacted and overcame these obstacles, they shared the recipes that defined them and created a new definition of what it meant to eat American food and a new identity as American eaters.
38

L’espace social alimentaire d’un village provençal : vivre une cuisine régionale au quotidien

Détolle, Anaïs 04 1900 (has links)
Les six dimensions du concept d’espace social alimentaire ont été structurées pour faciliter l’analyse de l’aspect proprement social de l’acte alimentaire. Analysée à travers ce concept, une cuisine régionale révèle le vécu alimentaire des personnes qui la consomment. Car la promotion d’une cuisine régionale se base sur des produits emblématiques qui ne sont pas nécessairement consommés au quotidien. Dans le village provençal de Sault, village resté à peu près hors des sentiers du tourisme de masse, je m’intéresserai aux habitudes alimentaires de la population. Ces habitudes correspondent-elles à ce que nous a habitué la promotion culinaire et diététique de la cuisine provençale ? En abordant l’aspect proprement social de l’acte alimentaire des habitants de Sault, je verrai la particularité composite des habitudes de consommation alimentaire illustrée par une identité provençale, un discours micro-régional et des habitudes françaises. / The concept of a 6-fold ‘social landscape of foodways’ (l’espace social alimentaire) was designed to facilitate the analysis of the social aspects of food practices. When analyzed in this manner, regional culinary practices come to be understood through the daily experiences of local people, and it becomes clear that the promotion of regional cuisine is often based on iconic food products that are not necessarily consumed on a daily basis. In the village of Sault, located in a part of Provence that has remained largely off the beaten path of mainstream tourism, I examined the food practices of local Provencal residents. Do their practices correspond to the image of Provencal cuisine that is so often promoted within culinary circles and the mass media? In examining the social aspects of Sault’s foodways, I discuss the specific elements that make up the community’s food practices: a Provencal identity through a micro-regional discourse and French customs.
39

L’espace social alimentaire d’un village provençal : vivre une cuisine régionale au quotidien

Détolle, Anaïs 04 1900 (has links)
Les six dimensions du concept d’espace social alimentaire ont été structurées pour faciliter l’analyse de l’aspect proprement social de l’acte alimentaire. Analysée à travers ce concept, une cuisine régionale révèle le vécu alimentaire des personnes qui la consomment. Car la promotion d’une cuisine régionale se base sur des produits emblématiques qui ne sont pas nécessairement consommés au quotidien. Dans le village provençal de Sault, village resté à peu près hors des sentiers du tourisme de masse, je m’intéresserai aux habitudes alimentaires de la population. Ces habitudes correspondent-elles à ce que nous a habitué la promotion culinaire et diététique de la cuisine provençale ? En abordant l’aspect proprement social de l’acte alimentaire des habitants de Sault, je verrai la particularité composite des habitudes de consommation alimentaire illustrée par une identité provençale, un discours micro-régional et des habitudes françaises. / The concept of a 6-fold ‘social landscape of foodways’ (l’espace social alimentaire) was designed to facilitate the analysis of the social aspects of food practices. When analyzed in this manner, regional culinary practices come to be understood through the daily experiences of local people, and it becomes clear that the promotion of regional cuisine is often based on iconic food products that are not necessarily consumed on a daily basis. In the village of Sault, located in a part of Provence that has remained largely off the beaten path of mainstream tourism, I examined the food practices of local Provencal residents. Do their practices correspond to the image of Provencal cuisine that is so often promoted within culinary circles and the mass media? In examining the social aspects of Sault’s foodways, I discuss the specific elements that make up the community’s food practices: a Provencal identity through a micro-regional discourse and French customs.
40

Mos wiyas sasigwan acitc sasipatakan : la contemporanéité alimentaire des Anicinabek de Lac Simon et leurs stratégies d’adaptation face au colonialisme alimentaire

Hamel-Charest, Laurence 03 1900 (has links)
Cette thèse analyse la contemporanéité alimentaire de la communauté anicinabe de Lac Simon de manière à comprendre comment ces Anicinabek ont fait face, d’un point de vue alimentaire, aux bouleversements engendrés par la colonisation. Je soutiens que les changements alimentaires qu’ils ont vécus n’ont pas abouti à une acculturation alimentaire complète et que l’on peut constater autre chose qu’une dégradation alimentaire. Se situant dans l’anthropologie dynamique, cette thèse se penche sur le changement social qui est appréhendé par l’entremise de l’alimentation, faisant ainsi de l’anthropologie par l’alimentation. La recherche est encadrée par une approche relationnelle dont sont empreintes la méthodologie et l’axiologie. L’analyse s’appuie sur une ethnographie alimentaire exploratoire et rend compte de savoirs acquis par l’intermédiaire de l’intersubjectivité établie entre les Anicinabek et la chercheuse qui a adopté une approche participante et un engagement expérientiel. Un souci d’historiciser les transformations alimentaires découle de la mobilisation de l’approche dynamique et l’approche adaptative. La première partie de la thèse analyse les composantes du colonialisme alimentaire vécu par les Anicinabek et situe le contexte catalyseur de bouleversements, la colonisation au Canada. En mobilisant le concept de situation coloniale, la dépossession de l’autonomie alimentaire des Anicinabek, et plus largement des Autochtones, est démontrée. Les effets des actions économique, missionnaire et administrative sur la culture alimentaire anicinabe sont examinés. La continuité des dynamiques de contrôle et de pouvoir est mise de l’avant alors qu’il est exposé qu’une assistance contemporaine en matière alimentaire, incarnée par la santé publique, aliène toujours en partie la capacité des Anicinabek de retrouver une autonomie alimentaire et qu’en ce sens, une forme de colonialisme alimentaire s’observe toujours. Cette assistance s’incarne dans le transfert d’une normativité alimentaire pensée dans une optique biomédicale idéale. La deuxième partie présente quatre stratégies d’adaptation mise en place par les Anicinabek pour assurer l’inscription de leur culture alimentaire dans un nouveau contexte de vie: la modulation alimentaire en fonction des territorialités alimentaires; la redéfinition des unités de commensalité et des modalités d’échange; l’adoption d’une conceptualisation dynamique de l’alimentation traditionnelle; la redéfinition des instances de transmission notamment par le biais de l’anicinabéisation de l’école. Chacune de ces stratégies révèle l’adaptation de relations: aux lieux et aux territoires, aux commensaux, à la tradition et à la mémoire, aux savoirs et aux connaissances. À travers cet examen, il est démontré que la relationnalité alimentaire des Anicinabek, c’est-à-dire leur réseau de relations alimentaires, s’est reconfigurée. La thèse met délibérément l’accent sur une facette positive d’une culture alimentaire autochtone se détachant ainsi du vaste corpus d’études qui se penche sur les problèmes qui leur sont souvent associés et qui caractérisent négativement l’état de santé des peuples autochtones au Canada. La thèse témoigne plutôt de l’agentivité des Anicinabek, de leur capacité d’adaptation ainsi que de leur inscription dans un processus de reprise de pouvoir alimentaire. / This thesis analyzes the food contemporaneity of the Anicinabe community of Lac Simon in order to understand from a dietary perspective how these Anicinabek have coped with the changes caused by colonization. I argue that the dietary changes they experienced did not result in complete dietary acculturation and that something other than foodways decline can be observed. Situated in dynamic anthropology, this thesis looks at social change as understood through food; ie., by doing anthropology through food. The research is framed in a relational approach that informs the methodology and axiology. The analysis is based on an exploratory food ethnography and reports knowledge acquired through the intersubjectivity established between the Anicinabek and the researcher who adopted a participatory approach and an experiential engagement. A concern for historicizing dietary transformations stems from my mobilization of the dynamic and adaptive approaches. In the first part of the thesis, I analyze the components of food colonialism experienced by the Anicinabek and situate them in the context of Canadian colonization. By mobilizing the concept of colonial situation, I seek to demonstrate the dispossession of the Anicinabek food autonomy, and more broadly, that of indigenous people in Canada. I put forward the effect of economic, missionary and administrative actions on Anicinabe foodways, showing continuity of colonial dynamics of control and power. Contemporary food assistance, embodied in public health, still alienates in part the capacity of the Anicinabek to reclaim food autonomy and that, in this sense, a form of food colonialism is ongoing. This assistance is embodied in the transfer of a food normativity thought from a biomedical perspective. In the second part of the thesis, I present four adaptive strategies the Anicinabek have developed to ensure that their foodways is inscribed in their new life context: the food modulation according to food territorialities; the redefinition of units of commensality and exchange modalities; the adoption of a dynamic conceptualization of the traditional food; the redefinition of the instances of transmission, in particular by the means of anicinabeization in schooling. Each of these strategies reveals the adaptation of relationships: to places and territories, commensality, tradition and memory, knowledge and skills. I show that the Anicinabeks’ food relationality, that is, their network of food relationships, has been reconfigured. The thesis deliberately focuses on a positive facet of an indigenous foodways in contrast to the large body of research that focuses on the problems often associated with them and that negatively characterize the health status of indigenous peoples in Canada. Instead, I seek to highlight the Anicinabek agency, their adaptive capacity, and their inclusion in the process of reclaiming their food power.

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