A Philosophy of Recipes
Making, Experiencing, and Valuing
Andrea Borghini editor Patrik Engisch editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:13th Jan '22
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Provides a theoretical framework for analysing the use of recipes in scholarly research, moving towards a philosophy of recipes and food.
This volume addresses the nature and identity of recipes from a cross-disciplinary perspective. Contributors study the values and norms guiding the naming, production, and consumption of recipes, scrutinizing their relationship to territory, makers, eaters, and places of production. Along the road, they uncover the multifaceted conceptual and value-laden questions that a study of recipes raises regarding cultural appropriation and the interplay between aesthetics and ethics in recipe making. With contributors specializing in philosophy, law, anthropology, sociology, history, and other disciplines, this volume will be of vital importance for those looking to understand the complex nature of food and the way recipes have shaped culinary cultures throughout history.
A diverse and rich collection that will serve as inspirational reading for both the philosopher and non-philosopher alike. * Food Ethics *
The philosophy of food is hot at the moment, but this book goes beyond the usual fare by suggesting—and indeed demonstrating—that recipes should be an item of central philosophical concern. Cross-disciplinary but without losing philosophical focus, this collection argues that recipes reflect our metaphysical and ethical commitments in unique and profound ways. * Andrew Chignell, Laurance S. Rockefeller Professor in Religion, Philosophy, and the University Center for Human Values, Princeton University, USA *
A fascinating collection of essays that explore not only what recipes are, but also what recipes do, and how they mediate and shape our relationship to food and cooking. * Gyorgy Scrinis, Associate Professor of Food Politics and Policy, University of Melbourne, Australia and author of Nutritionism: The Science and Politics of Dietary Advice (2015). *
As more scholars recognize what rich sources recipes are for understanding human societies, this edited collection of meditations on the theme will be a very useful guide. The central question of how to think with recipes is answered beautifully and diversely here in a book that engages with all kinds of parameters, including law, cooking tools, and microbial motivations. * Megan Elias, Associate Professor of Gastronomy, Boston University, USA *
ISBN: 9781350145917
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 590g
296 pages