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Black Cookstove

Meditations on Literature, Culture, and Cuisine in Colombia

Germán Patiño Ossa author Jonathan Tittler translator

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Pennsylvania State University Press

Published:22nd Oct '20

Should be back in stock very soon

Black Cookstove cover

Winner of the 2006 Andrés Bello Award for Memory and Ibero-American Thought

In this evocatively written book, Germán Patiño Ossa presents the cultural universe and national identities of Colombia through the lens of traditional cuisine. Focusing on the Cauca Valley, a fertile area in southwestern Colombia where Spanish, Native American, and African communities converged over the centuries, Patiño Ossa studies the food of these communities and its place in the region’s culture.

Using Jorge Isaacs’s nineteenth-century Romantic novel María as a realistic source for cultural practices among Colombia’s slaveholding elite, Patiño Ossa examines cooking, kitchens, and the division of labor; flora and fauna; agriculture, hunting, and fishing; hospitality; slavery; and literature. Through the community of Afro-descendants who appear in Isaacs’s novel, Patiño Ossa shows how this culinary culture, originating in the cookstoves used by female black slaves, resulted in the Creole fusions that characterize this geographical region of Latin America.Cooking and food, as Patiño Ossa eloquently demonstrates, are essential for us to understand the process of the formation of culture and the origins, evolution, and effects of transculturation.

Innovative, engaging, and accompanied by an introductory preface by the author, this English-language edition of Patiño Ossa’s prizewinning book is a model for food and cultural studies that will appeal to scholars, students, and the intellectually curious.

“A highly original and fascinating book. Black Cookstove engages with a vast repertory of interdisciplinary studies: literary, historical, anthropological, botanical, and cultural-studies works on cuisine, culture, and food consumption in Latin America, Europe, and the United States. Germán Patiño Ossa’s work is part of a larger project—a history of the culture of Colombian society that reevaluates the presence and relevance of African descendants as cultural agents.”

—María Antonia Garcés, author of Cervantes in Algiers: A Captive’s Tale


“Utilizing a range of  sources, Black Cookstove evokes the cuisine of the Cauca Valley and demonstrates that Afro-Colombians were central to its creation.”

—Rebecca Earle, author of The Body of the Conquistador: Food, Race and the Colonial Experience in Spanish America, 1492-1700


“The book nevertheless remains a literary gem for aficionados of the Cauca Valley and its abundant cultural manifestations.”

—Martina Kaller EIAL: Interdisciplinary Studies of Latin America and the Caribbean

ISBN: 9780271086989

Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 11mm

Weight: 181g

112 pages