Description

Book Synopsis

In Culinary Diplomacy's Role in the Immigrant Experience: Fiction and Memoirs of Middle Eastern Women, the emergent field of literary food studies engages with international diplomacy studies to establish books with recipes as tools of culinary diplomacy. Foundational to the argument is culinary diplomacy scholar Sam Chapple-Sokol’s concept of Citizen Culinary Diplomacy which endorses public events that promote understanding of cultures and people. However, this study challenges that definition and argues that culinary fiction and memoirs are shared interactive experiences between the author, the readers, and the culture written about. Foundational to the study are twentieth century postcolonial literary theories of Homi Bhabha and Édouard Glissant and twenty-first century transnational theory of sociologists Julian Go and Ulrich Beck to recognize culinary diplomacy's vital role in international affairs. Culinary Diplomacy’s Role in the Immigrant Experience examines food as metaphorical expression in literature, and the impact of time, space, and place in developing diplomatic relationships between East and West in books by Diana Abu-Jaber, Donia Bijan, Joanne Harris, and Marsha Mehran.



Table of Contents

Introduction

Section I - Strangers in a Strange Land

Chapter 1 - Café Space and Culinary Diplomacy in Marsha Mehran’s Pomegranate Soup and Rosewater and Soda Bread

Chapter 2 - Culinary Diplomacy Beyond Café Space in Joanne Harris’s Peaches for Monsieur le Curé

Chapter 3 - The Legacy of Citizen Culinary Diplomacy in Donia Bijan’s The Last Days of Café Leila

Section II - Writing with Gusto: The “Gustemological” in Culinary Fiction

Chapter 4 - Food as Metaphorical Expression in Mehran’s Pomegranate Soup

Chapter 5 - Cooking up Identity in Abu-Jaber’s Crescent

Chapter 6 - “Your Place is Empty” – Food and Transcultural Identity in Middle Eastern Women’s Culinary Memoirs

Culinary Diplomacy’s Role in the Immigrant

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    A Hardback by Jennifer Gray

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      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 07/04/2021
      ISBN13: 9781793627339, 978-1793627339
      ISBN10: 1793627339

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      In Culinary Diplomacy's Role in the Immigrant Experience: Fiction and Memoirs of Middle Eastern Women, the emergent field of literary food studies engages with international diplomacy studies to establish books with recipes as tools of culinary diplomacy. Foundational to the argument is culinary diplomacy scholar Sam Chapple-Sokol’s concept of Citizen Culinary Diplomacy which endorses public events that promote understanding of cultures and people. However, this study challenges that definition and argues that culinary fiction and memoirs are shared interactive experiences between the author, the readers, and the culture written about. Foundational to the study are twentieth century postcolonial literary theories of Homi Bhabha and Édouard Glissant and twenty-first century transnational theory of sociologists Julian Go and Ulrich Beck to recognize culinary diplomacy's vital role in international affairs. Culinary Diplomacy’s Role in the Immigrant Experience examines food as metaphorical expression in literature, and the impact of time, space, and place in developing diplomatic relationships between East and West in books by Diana Abu-Jaber, Donia Bijan, Joanne Harris, and Marsha Mehran.



      Table of Contents

      Introduction

      Section I - Strangers in a Strange Land

      Chapter 1 - Café Space and Culinary Diplomacy in Marsha Mehran’s Pomegranate Soup and Rosewater and Soda Bread

      Chapter 2 - Culinary Diplomacy Beyond Café Space in Joanne Harris’s Peaches for Monsieur le Curé

      Chapter 3 - The Legacy of Citizen Culinary Diplomacy in Donia Bijan’s The Last Days of Café Leila

      Section II - Writing with Gusto: The “Gustemological” in Culinary Fiction

      Chapter 4 - Food as Metaphorical Expression in Mehran’s Pomegranate Soup

      Chapter 5 - Cooking up Identity in Abu-Jaber’s Crescent

      Chapter 6 - “Your Place is Empty” – Food and Transcultural Identity in Middle Eastern Women’s Culinary Memoirs

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