Description

Book Synopsis

This book is an ethnographic work on excess. Based on a decade-long field work of a single food substance â sweets â it follows sweet-making in sweetshops, domestic spaces, fairs, festivals and its representation in recipe books to understand how caste, religion, science and law inform the life of a food item with an extremely short shelf life. It shows how food items of conspicuous consumption find a meaning in everyday lives of people through its socio-cultural meanings - ritual, pride of craftsmanship, heritage and cultural identity. It also shows how sweets continue to be a ubiquitous part of âBengaliâ diet in a geography that has been witness to acute hunger, starvation, food movements and social welfare programmes to ensure food security.

A multi-sited ethnography on sweetness in diverse settings and its associated meanings in West Bengal and Bangladesh, this book explores everyday workplace hierarchies between artisans reveal how caste and religion inform the choice of who is hired into this line of work. It also highlights how discourses on food safety and the overpowering presence of World Trade Organisation has affected the life of the Bengali mishti.

The volume will be of great interest to scholars and researchers of ethnography, sociology, history, and South Asian studies. And if you, dear reader, love mishti, you will love this, too!

Sweet Excess

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    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Tue 9 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback by Ishita Dey

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      Publisher: Taylor & Francis
      Publication Date: 10/15/2025
      ISBN13: 9781041113201, 978-1041113201
      ISBN10: 104111320X

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      This book is an ethnographic work on excess. Based on a decade-long field work of a single food substance â sweets â it follows sweet-making in sweetshops, domestic spaces, fairs, festivals and its representation in recipe books to understand how caste, religion, science and law inform the life of a food item with an extremely short shelf life. It shows how food items of conspicuous consumption find a meaning in everyday lives of people through its socio-cultural meanings - ritual, pride of craftsmanship, heritage and cultural identity. It also shows how sweets continue to be a ubiquitous part of âBengaliâ diet in a geography that has been witness to acute hunger, starvation, food movements and social welfare programmes to ensure food security.

      A multi-sited ethnography on sweetness in diverse settings and its associated meanings in West Bengal and Bangladesh, this book explores everyday workplace hierarchies between artisans reveal how caste and religion inform the choice of who is hired into this line of work. It also highlights how discourses on food safety and the overpowering presence of World Trade Organisation has affected the life of the Bengali mishti.

      The volume will be of great interest to scholars and researchers of ethnography, sociology, history, and South Asian studies. And if you, dear reader, love mishti, you will love this, too!

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