The Food We Eat, the Stories We Tell
Contemporary Appalachian Tables
Elizabeth S D Engelhardt editor Lora E Smith editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Ohio University Press
Published:5th Nov '19
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This paperback is available in another edition too:
- Hardback£54.00(9780821423912)
This anthology explores Appalachian cuisine and culture, revealing how food shapes identities and communities. The Food We Eat, the Stories We Tell offers diverse perspectives on American food practices.
In The Food We Eat, the Stories We Tell, a diverse collection of voices brings to life the rich tapestry of Appalachian cuisine and culture. From blue ridge tacos to kimchi served with soup beans and cornbread, this anthology weaves together personal narratives and cultural reflections that reveal the significance of food in shaping identities and communities. Each contributor adds a unique perspective, showcasing how contemporary Appalachian tables serve as gateways to understanding the past, present, and future of American food practices.
The anthology highlights the hidden stories found in cookbook marginalia, where family histories and traditions are preserved alongside recipes. It also explores the influence of African American mountain gardens, illustrating how these agricultural practices contribute to the broader narrative of Appalachian foodways. Through the lenses of poets, scholars, fiction writers, and food professionals, readers are invited to discover how what we eat paints a vivid picture of Appalachia's journey.
Ultimately, The Food We Eat, the Stories We Tell invites readers to reflect on their own relationships with food and the stories that accompany it. As contributors share their experiences and insights, the anthology underscores the idea that food is not just sustenance but a vital part of our cultural heritage and personal histories. This collection serves as a celebration of the diverse flavors and stories that define Appalachian life.
“Nothing else besides food nourishes us as profoundly as stories. Here we have a celebration of both, presented in an original, beautiful, and delicious manner. This book fairly bursts with a bounty of words—and wonderful illustrations—that manage to articulate just why food is so important in the way it connects and sustains us. I didn’t realize how much Appalachian Literature needed a book like this until I sat down and devoured the whole thing.“
“Appalachian food is more than beans and corn bread, and this anthology explores its depth…. There are several takes on the food of immigrants, from Korea, Mexico, Spain, and Switzerland…. In all, (The Food We Eat, the Stories We Tell) contains a diversity of voices, styles, and cuisines that will be a pleasant surprise to those unfamiliar with the region.” * Booklist *
"Foodways have become such a fad, that it is tempting to respond to a new book on the subject with a ho-hum. NO! Not this book. It builds on the foundation that previous books have provided. It expands upon their reach. (The Food We Eat, the Stories We Tell) features writers who are more diverse and well-versed, scholars who are more accomplished, story-tellers who are more proficient, and poets who are more gifted.” * Appalachian Mountain Books *
“Everything we have been handed down, from cookbook to rosette wand, everything we receive, from egg roll to taco, everything we jones for, from red hot hotdogs to candies, becomes a piece of our history, a thread in the story leading to more story. Sitting at the Appalachian table we can taste the proof of a strong, lasting, surprisingly diverse, and infinitely textured history.”
“Engelhardt and Smith bring together a diverse group of writers who deftly use foodways to tackle a number of important themes, from identity and power to placemaking and the meaning of ‘Appalachia.’ Working against lingering but misleading and politicized regional signifiers, this riveting and readable book offers a fresh perspective on Appalachia, using foodways as a lens.”
“In The Food We Eat, the Stories We Tell, Engelhardt and Smith offer an important and informed antidote to Hillbilly Elegy. The contributors handily debunk commonly held narratives and stereotypes, offering a well-rounded, balanced, and insightful look into Appalachia’s peoples and their foodways.”
“This book is a creative and challenging anthology about food and Appalachia. I don’t know anything else like it. It both pokes fun at nostalgia but also absorbs it. It doesn’t bow to so-called foodies but is most definitely focused on the power of food to mediate memory, place, social stratification, pleasure, and resistance.”
“This is how I want to understand a place, and particularly a place so resistant to definition (and pronunciation) as the diverse and complex region studied here. Pick the most interesting, compelling, and irreverent voices of the region’s best contemporary writers and thinkers, and say, ‘Food. Here. NOW. Tell us of your Appalachia—its flavor, joys and sorrows, inequalities, dialects, the shape of IT, heritage, work, soil, movement, and always, always, change.’ And, there you have it: a tremendously dynamic collection representing food studies as the engaging and enlightening scholarship it can be.”
ISBN: 9780821423929
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
218 pages