Welcome to our book review site go-pdf.online!

You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.

Sign up

The Poetics of Fire
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 328

The Poetics of Fire

In The Poetics of Fire, Pulitzer prize-winning journalist and Chicano author Victor M. Valle posits the chile as a metaphor for understanding the shared cultural histories of ChicanX and LatinX peoples from preconquest Mesoamerica to twentieth-century New Mexico. Valle uses the chile as a decolonizing lens through which to analyze preconquest Mesoamerican cosmology, early European exploration, and the forced conversion of Native peoples to Catholicism as well as European and Mesoamerican perspectives on food and place. Assembling a rich collection of source material, Valle highlights the fiery fruit's overarching importance as evidenced by the ubiquity of references to the plant over several centuries in literature, art, official documents, and more to offer a new eco-aesthetic reading--a reframing of culinary history from a pluralistic, non-Western perspective.

Doing Nutrition Differently
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 325

Doing Nutrition Differently

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2016-05-13
  • -
  • Publisher: Routledge

'Hegemonic nutrition' is produced and proliferated by a wide variety of social institutions such as mainstream nutrition science, clinical nutrition as well as those less classically linked such as life science/agro-food companies, the media, family, education, religion and the law. The collective result is an approach to and practice of nutrition that alleges not only one single, clear-cut and consented-upon set of rules for 'healthy eating,' but also tacit criteria for determining individual fault, usually some combination of lack of education, motivation, and unwillingness to comply. Offering a collection of critical, interdisciplinary replies and responses to the matter of 'hegemonic nut...

Global Goods and the Spanish Empire, 1492-1824
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 322

Global Goods and the Spanish Empire, 1492-1824

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2014-11-18
  • -
  • Publisher: Springer

Drawing upon economic history, cultural studies, intellectual history and the history of science and medicine, this collection of case studies examines the transatlantic transfer and transformation of goods and ideas, with particular emphasis on their reception in Europe.

Inter-American Yearbook on Human Rights / Anuario Interamericano de Derechos Humanos, Volume 33 (2017)
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 768
To Feast on Us as Their Prey
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 293

To Feast on Us as Their Prey

Winner, 2020 Association for the Study of Food and Society Book Award, Edited Volume Long before the founding of the Jamestown, Virginia, colony and its Starving Time of 1609–1610—one of the most famous cannibalism narratives in North American colonial history—cannibalism played an important role in shaping the human relationship to food, hunger, and moral outrage. Why did colonial invaders go out of their way to accuse women of cannibalism? What challenges did Spaniards face in trying to explain Eucharist rites to Native peoples? What roles did preconceived notions about non-Europeans play in inflating accounts of cannibalism in Christopher Columbus’s reports as they moved through Italian merchant circles? Asking questions such as these and exploring what it meant to accuse someone of eating people as well as how cannibalism rumors facilitated slavery and the rise of empires, To Feast on Us as Their Prey posits that it is impossible to separate histories of cannibalism from the role food and hunger have played in the colonization efforts that shaped our modern world.

Mesquite Pods to Mezcal
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 400

Mesquite Pods to Mezcal

New case studies documenting ten thousand years of cuisines across the cultures of Oaxaca, Mexico, from the earliest gathered plants, such as guajes, to the contemporary production of tejate and its health implications. Among the richest culinary traditions in Mexico are those of the “eight regions” of the state of Oaxaca. Mesquite Pods to Mezcal brings together some of the most prominent scholars in Oaxacan archaeology and related fields to explore the evolution of the area’s world-renowned cuisines. This volume, the first to address food practices across Oaxaca through a long-term historical lens, covers the full spectrum of human occupation in Oaxaca, from the early Holocene to cont...

Alimentación e identidades en el Nuevo Reino de Granada, siglos XVI y XVII
  • Language: es
Alimentación e identidades en el Nuevo Reino de Granada, siglos XVI y XVII
  • Language: es
  • Pages: 672

Alimentación e identidades en el Nuevo Reino de Granada, siglos XVI y XVII

Este libro busca comprender la forma en que se crearon y transformaron identidades alimenticias en el Nuevo Reino de Granada, durante los siglos XVI y XVII. Para ello toma como punto de partida dos ejes centrales: las concepciones sobre la abundancia y las formas en las que el comercio hispánico modificó los panoramas alimenticios de los indígenas y de los españoles.

La insercin̤ del maz̕ en el gusto de la sociedad colonial del Nuevo Reino de Granada
  • Language: es
Food, Texts, and Cultures in Latin America and Spain
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 379

Food, Texts, and Cultures in Latin America and Spain

The fourteen essays in Food, Texts, and Cultures in Latin America and Spain showcase the eye-opening potential of a food lens within colonial studies, ethnic and racial studies, gender and sexuality studies, and studies of power dynamics, nationalisms and nation building, theories of embodiment, and identity. In short, Food, Texts, and Cultures in Latin America and Spain grapples with an emerging field in need of a foundational text, and does so from multiple angles. The studies span from the Middle Ages to the twenty-first century, and the contributing scholars occupy diverse fields within Latin American and Hispanic Studies. As such, their essays showcase eclectic critical and theoretical approaches to the subject of Latin American and Iberian food. Food, Texts, and Cultures in Latin America and Spain also introduces the first English-language publication of works from such award-winning scholars as Adolfo Castañón of the Mexican Academy of Language; Sergio Ramírez, winner of the 2017 Miguel de Cervantes Prize in Literature; and Carmen Simón Palmer, winner of the 2015 Julián Marías Prize for Research.