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Culinary Cultures and Convergent Histories
ISHITA BANERJEE-DUBE
Lo, the pious are in gardens and delight,
Enjoying what their Lord hath bestowed upon
Them, and their Lord hath protected them
From the punishment of the Hot Place
Eat and drink with relish, for what ye have been doing
(Qu’ran, 1939, 2, Surah 52, The Mount, 536;
cited in Peterson, 1980, 321)
A
n intimate association of eating with sensual pleasure in Muslim theology –
depicted in the Garden of Delights – had occasioned serious unease in the
Christian world that could barely digest the bonding of religion and sensuousness.
What caused immense concern was the fact that this ‘philosophy of gratification’
did not only promise joys after death. It spoke of, indeed encouraged, the reaping
of pleasure in life by associating good life with good eating (Peterson, 1980,
321). This was in stark contrast to the austerity and temperance demanded of
Christians in this life as a step toward an angelic society in heaven (Peterson,
1980, 322). Hence, after the Qu’ran was translated into Latin by the mid-twelfth
century, scholars devoted themselves to the task of discerning whether this
association was real or allegorical. Others, however, found a different use for this
bonding of eating and pleasure in this life. An ‘upheaval’ occurred in the cooking
of the European elite from about 1300 CE, accompanied by a marked change in
the attitude toward food (Peterson, 1980, 317).
I begin the introduction on this note to divulge, at the outset, an important
argument of the book. The volume seeks to explore how food, cooking and
cuisine, in different societies, cultures and over different periods of time, are
essentially results of confection – combination – of ingredients, ideas, ideologies
and imagination, inflected by relations of power and experiments with creativity.
Such blends, churned out of transcultural flows of goods, people and ideas,
colonial encounters and engagements, adventure and adaptation, and change
in attitude and taste, enable convergent histories of the globe kneaded by food
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and cooking that tell us about being and belonging, pride, identity, hospitality
and sociability, class and power, and nation and culture that are ever ready to be
cast in different moulds. They also point to a convergence between the histories
of the world as one of ‘species migration’, whether through climate or habitat
change or population pressure, or through more active processes of human
intervention, and of food, eating and cuisine as being constituted by such mixing
and migration. The different chapters of the book look at the evolution of food in
distinct parts of the globe over different periods of time from diverse perspectives.
Yet, together they portray and convey the polyphony that surrounds food and
cooking, a polyphony often subsumed by the attempted homogenisation that
underlies the construction of ‘national’, ‘natural’ or ‘regional’ cultures. In contrast
to such homogenisation, this book offers a tale strewn together from a variety of
smells and tastes, peoples and places and their multiple mixtures. The chapters
also highlight the importance of sharing and exchanging food as vital elements of
‘culture’ and sociability, elements that are often used to mark social distinctions
and not erase them (Peters, 2016; Pilcher, 1998).
An early cookery book of Baghdad had drawn upon the Qu’ran to declare food
to be ‘the noblest and most consequential’ of the six human pleasures, along with
drinks, clothes, sex, scent and sound (Peterson, 1980, 322). The write-up on an
adventurous book on the history of food calls cuisine ‘the defining characteristic
of a culture’ (Fernández-Armesto, 2002). What makes food and cuisine tick
as the ‘noblest pleasure’, and the most significant element of a culture? What
makes Indian food serve as ‘street food’ in Cairo and ‘court food’ in Isfahan and
yet remain a prop of national culture? How has ‘curry’, invented during British
rule in India, moved back and forth between India and England and come to
signify ‘Indian food’ in the world? This volume addresses some of these issues
in its attempt to track how peoples and cultures relate to food and cuisine, and
how such bonding shapes cartographies of belonging and identities. It explores
the elements and processes that go into the cooking of cultures, in which food
and cuisine are flavoured by adaptation and innovation, transcultural and
trans-regional flows, and nostalgia and re-creation; and ‘national’, ‘regional’ and
‘cosmopolitan’ cultures, along with personhood, are concocted and confected.
The volume takes into serious account reminders that food, as an important
element of material culture, significantly shapes individual and collective
identities (Palmer, 1998, 183) and that food is neither neutral nor innocent
but a product of dominant ideologies and power structures (Cusack, 2000,
208). Indeed, the first essay of the volume examines and interrogates why and
how certain plant and animal species are constructed as ‘natural’, ‘native’ and
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‘indigenous’ as opposed to ‘alien’ and ‘invasive’ through human intervention
even before the process of cooking transforms them into food (Brown, 2016).
At the same time, it pays attention to how food is produced by means of a
delicate blend of emotion and creativity, nostalgia and affect, and cultural
exchange. Even while cultural exchange is unequal – and identity and emotion
surrounding food are permeated by established structures, power relations and
norms that condition subjectivities – ingenuity, resourcefulness, adaptation
and blending add vital flavour and spice to cultures of cooking and buttress
the cooking of cultures.
This work draws inspiration from incisive statements that point to the intimate
links between love and nurture, food and desire, and hunger and satisfaction.
Here are two instances. M. F. K. Fisher, the celebrated US writer on food, had
stated in the ‘Foreword’ to her now classic The Gastronomical Me (1943) that she
wrote on food, eating and drinking and not about more ‘serious themes’ such
as struggle for power and security because the ‘three basic needs, for food and
security and love’, are so mingled and entwined, that ‘we cannot straightly think
of the one without the others.’ A few years before the publication of Fisher’s
book, the humanist and nobel-laureate poet from Bengal, Rabindrantah Tagore,
had alluringly evoked the innate pleasures of love and care articulated in the
tender serving of food by the lover, an act that simultaneously satisfied the mind
and the body. In this poem titled Nimantran (‘Invitation’ published in Bithika,
1935), the poet had mused on how the expectant meeting with the lover was to
become more enthralling and complete if she were to serve delicacies garnished
by her care, and gratify thereby ‘the nest of desire that resides in the tongue’.
Such statements, made by different persons in distinct locations, serve as the
basic dough that gets baked in diverse ways in the different chapters.
Ambitious in terms of its range and scope, the volume straddles various
parts of Asia and Africa, and touches upon Australia and Mexico with tempting
references to Europe. It also covers the nineteenth, twentieth and twenty-first
centuries and themes as diverse as notions of indigeneity and wildness centring
on the trout in South Africa; power struggles over and through food and diet in
Vietnamese villages; ‘Hummus wars’ between Israel and Palestine, the distinct
meanings of local food in central China and their gradual standardisation in
restaurant chains; the role of women as procurers and providers of food in the
Senegalese capital of Dakar; the significance of the domestic servant, the ‘cookie’,
in the development of colonial cuisine in Malaysia and Singapore; blending,
hybridity and nostalgia inherent in transplantations and reproductions of smells
and tastes of ‘authentic’ food from Syria to London, and from Morocco to Paris
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Ishita Banerjee-Dube
and Adelaide. It also explores early attempts to create a well-organised menu and
‘modern’ cuisine in colonial eastern India that took the health of the family (and
the nation) as its central concern; the various moods, sentiments and meanings
associated with sweets in Japan; food taboos in Mozambique as critical markers
of personhood and ‘humanness’ as opposed to the ‘sorcerer’; and the differential
deployment of myths in the construction of Mexican ‘national’ cuisine.
In brief, the volume covers almost all the important themes examined in
food studies over the last decade and a half: food and identity, food and power,
food and nation, food and (ritual) symbolism, food and gender, and food and
affect. Its distinguishing feature is the exploration of convergent concerns, as
well as divergent sentiments that mutually shape cultures of cooking and the
cooking of cultures through the construal of being and belonging in distinct
parts of the globe. The various essays ‘deconstruct’ food as a finished product in
order to lay bare the essential blend that gives meaning to food and cooking, the
‘origin’ creation, to use the words of Modhumita Roy (Roy, 2010, 67). In distinct
ways, the chapters track the course of plant, animal and human movement and
human intervention, transcultural flows dating back to several centuries, and
unravel the production of food and cuisine as premised, on the one hand, on
unequal relations of power and ideology, colonial encounters, and class and
gender relations, and on the other, on innovation and experimentation, love
and pride and inspiration that endow the everyday act of procuring, cooking
and consuming food with polyvalent significance. The volume unpacks how
the inherently mixed nature of food and cooking shores and spikes up notions
of ‘national culture’, identity and personhood, and often serves to perpetuate
established unequal social relations even while boundaries get constructed
and transgressed simultaneously. A combination of distinct lines of research
covering a large part of the globe makes the volume essentially rich – in smells
and flavours, myths and metaphors, tales and battles, temptations and taboos,
and succulent savouries that enable juxtaposition and comparison and open the
way for convergent histories of food and feeling across the globe.
State of the art
The discipline of anthropology, we are aware, was the first to take serious note
of food and eating as important themes of research. Early practitioners of the
discipline such as Raymond Firth (1934), Bronislow Malinowski (1935) and
Cora Dubois (1941) had commented on the centrality of food in cultures.
Historians of the French Annales School had also paid serious attention to
food and eating patterns from around the same time. A few decades later,
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cultural anthropology took the lead in emphasising the importance of food
and foodways for human societies and, by extension, for social sciences.
The classical writings of Claude Levi-Strauss (1966, 586–96; 1970; 1978),
Margaret Mead (1971), Mary Douglas (1971, 61–81), Sidney Mintz (1979,
56–73), Pierre Bourdieu (1984) and Roland Barthes ([1961] 1979, 166–73),
to take just a few examples, not only offered valuable ethnographic details
on food and underscored food and cuisine as crucial elements of culture and
personhood, but also reflected on the capacity of food and cooking to serve as
codes that conveyed significant social meaning.
Such writings were complemented by anthropological studies of particular
societies that analysed the role of religious symbolism in food transactions and
food taboos (Marriott, 1976, 133–71), as well as by cultural materialist works –
such as that of Marvin Harris – that rejected semiotics to insist on economic and
ecological factors behind the selection of gustatory elements by particular peoples
(Harris, 1975). Social and cultural historians contributed to this scholarship by
analysing food as an index of changing class relations or as a mode of sustenance
that nourished bodies and identities (Tannahill, 1973) for instance.
Works on nutrition, heath, agriculture and economics offered distinct
understandings of the value of food for sustenance, while important anthologies
examined the evolution of food in particular societies from historical and
anthropological perspectives (Chang, 1977). In addition, insightful analyses
of transformations of food patterns occasioned by industrialisation offered
comparative perspectives on food in different societies (Goody, 1982, 154–74);
innovative readings of cookery books commented on the changing configurations
of ‘national cuisine’ (Appadurai, 1988, for example); and experimental historicalanthropological readings commented on how a particular element of food
contributed to shifting demarcations of the self from the other in a particular
culture (Ohnuki-Tierney, 1993).
Specific articles in journals of history and anthropology, such as Toby
Peterson’s ‘The Arab Influence on Western European Cooking’ (1980), opened
new ways and consolidated research on food and cooking. A specialised journal
in French, Petits Propos Culinaires, started coming out from the 1980s; ‘The
Oxford Symposium of Food History’ offered a space for the exchange of ideas to
interested students; and David Burton’s The Raj at Table (1993) connected the
empire and the colony through flavour and taste by offering a delectable social
history of the emergence of colonial dishes – the essence of curry.
Food studies got a tremendous boost from the end of the twentieth century
with the publication of a wide range of anthologies, interdisciplinary studies,
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and journals dedicated entirely to food. The Oxford Companion to Food appeared
in 1999, accompanied by Carole Counihan and Penny van Esterik’s reader on
Food and Culture on the other side of the Atlantic ([1999] 2013). The Cambridge
World History of Food (2000) was soon to follow. Felipe Fernádez-Armesto made
a strong case to integrate food history as an integral part of world history in his
entertaining work, Near A Thousand Tables, while Lizzie Collingham’s Curry: A
Biography (2005) and Curry: A Tale of Cooks and Conquerors (2006) enticingly
mixed recipes and their histories, chance invention and deft adaptation, to offer
an account of the development of British-Indian cuisine and its move back to
Britain. Such British-Indian recipes feature recurrently and prominently in
‘Indian’ restaurants in England run primarily by Bangladeshis.
Appetite, Culture, Agriculture, Food and Foodways, Global food History, to
name just a few of the wide range of journals, strengthened food studies as a valid
and valuable field of interdisciplinary investigation. This went hand in hand with
the participation of geographers, philosophers, psychologists, literary, feminist
and film studies scholars in food studies. Together, they broke the preserve of
anthropologists, historians, sociologists and economists over food and cooking
and enormously enriched research on food.
Counihan and van Esterik credit feminist and women’s studies scholars with
bringing about this explosion in food studies. The insistence of such scholars,
argue Counihan and van Esterik, on the necessity of studying a ‘domain of
human behaviour so closely associated with women across time and cultures’,
helped foster an interest in food among many (Counihan and van Esterik,
2013, 2). This, together with the politicisation of food and a growth of social
movements linked to food, established food as a central element of human lives.
And once it gained legitimacy, the ‘novelty, richness, and scope’ of food opened
innumerable pathways for scholars to follow (Counihan and van Estenk, 2013).
Food has increasingly come to be recognised as a mode that communicates
a lot about culture and consumption, moods and emotion, taste and identity,
hunger and privation, and hierarchy and discrimination. If the evolution of the
Renaissance banquet has been studied as representative of social relations and
etiquette, class and table manners (Albala, 2007), a surge in commodity histories,
that of a spice, a plant or a species of fish, (Kurlansky, 1998, 2003; Coe and Coe,
2000; Turner, 2004) have added a different dimension to what constitutes food.
If such histories tend to tell a story of triumph, a rags-to-riches tale where one
humble fish, or mineral or plant fights aristocratic prejudices to find favour
among one and all (Roy, 2010, 67), they also underscore the significance of food
as commodity. Such studies moreover, are adequately complemented by many
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other studies of how what we eat gets constructed, identified and valourised, as
well as invested with meanings and emotion. If Laura Esquivel’s Como Agua para
Chocolate (Like Water for Chocolate), an edgy literary text alluding to recipes
for food and for broken heart (that also got made into a film) represents the
play with love and cooking in literature, the inclusion of Fisher’s foreword as a
foreword to Food and Culture by Counihan and van Esterik demonstrate their
belief in the entwinement of love, food and security affirmed by Fisher.
The intimacy and intensity of food and feeling find daily expression
in innumerable cooking and baking competitions, television shows and a
profusion of recipes in magazines, newspapers and journal columns, and a surge
in signature restaurants of chefs. Trips today, lament some and revel others, of
upper-middle class and rich people from various societies and places are not
measured any longer by what they have seen –museums or archaeological sites –
but by what they have eaten in which restaurant.
This work pays attention to this change of orientation from sight and sound
to smell and touch in offering another food tour across the globe, one that offers
insights into feelings and emotion, taste and choice, and struggle and adaptation
that go into the constitution of cooking and cuisine as central artefacts of culture
and society.
The palate
The volume offers a mosaic of the many meanings of food and cooking through
fragments of smells and tastes, markets and kitchens, restaurants and menus,
sharing and competition, and food taboos to chart distinct cartographies of
love and affect, being and belonging, and identity and power. It intends to
probe why people eat what they do, how they relate to food practices that
define what cooking is, and the many ways cuisine relates to society and social
relations to see if one can glean a ‘culinary philosophy’ (Laudan, 2013, 1). At
the same time, it also wishes to unravel the construction of food and cooking as
blends and confection – of ingredients, innovation, spices, trans-regional and
cross-cultural interaction, power and ideology, adaptation and creativity, and
feeling and sentiment – that constitute cuisine as a vital element of social life.
The common thread that runs through the chapters is a consideration of how
food and cuisine enable people to articulate not just who they are but what
they want to be; and the interplay of intersecting processes and sentiments
that go into the making of people as persons and of groups and communities
as ‘cultures’.
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The volume is divided into four sections, each with distinct yet overlapping
and crisscrossing concerns. The first one, on ‘Food, Pride and Power’, includes
contributions on South Africa, the Middle East and Vietnam. It begins with a
suggestive essay by Duncan Brown on notions of indigeneity and wildness as
played out over understandings of the trout as an ‘invasive, alien species’ in
South Africa. Pointing to the fact that plant and animal species move, not just on
account of human intervention such as transportation, planting and stocking,
but also on account of habitat and climate change, Brown upsets simple notions
of indigeneity, endemicity and the right to belong from the beginning. He
sustains this further by analysing the Oxford English Dictionary’s definition
of ‘belonging’ as ‘[to] be rightly or naturally placed [… to] fit a specified
environment, or [to] be not out of place’, to argue that the definition(s) make
an easy equation between ‘to be naturally placed’, ‘to be in the right place’ and
‘to belong’, an equation that is ‘heavily loaded with moral values’. Hence, such
definitions are both subjective and specific. The moot question, in Brown’s
reckoning, is what is given the right to belong and why. In South Africa and
other societies marked by colonial histories, such an issue in closely tied to that
of human identity. The binary divisions of ‘natural’ or ‘native’ versus ‘wild’ or
‘alien’, ‘nature’ versus culture’ are as treacherous as they are misleading because
they are predicated on biological models that exclude human intervention, and
do not take social or cultural activities like ‘cuisine’, ‘cultivation’ or imaginative
association, and moral values into account. Brown uses the debate on the
continued presence of trout in South Africa to creatively think through the
complexities that underlie conceptions of indigeneity, alienness, and identity
and advocates an understanding of biodiversity and belonging not in terms
of simple origin or autochthony, which is ‘deeply problematic’, but in terms of
(biological) interdependence and accommodation.
The second essay tracks issues of belonging and ‘naturalness’ by following the
conflict (and camaraderie) between Israel and Lebanon over a shared culinary
passion: Hummus. This dip, of mashed chickpeas seasoned with tahini and lemon
juice, is ubiquitous in Middle Eastern public and private culinary spheres and is
extremely popular among Arabs and Jews. In 2008, hummus became the focus
of a heated debate between Israel and Lebanon over issues of cultural copyright
and national heritage and their implicit economic repercussions. Focussing
on these ‘Hummus Wars’, Nir Avieli unfolds a colourful tale of the enactment
of a series of culinary contests that aimed at the reification of hummus as the
key element of the culinary heritage of both nations. Proportion, rather than
flavour, became crucial in this contest as Lebanon and Israel competed to set
the Guinness world record for the largest hummus dish. Avieli’s situated, spicy
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and ‘internal’ ethnography of one such contest in the Palestinian-Israeli village
of Abu Gosh highlights how cooking and cuisine transcend the social sphere
and straddle the political where they mediate and negotiate the construction of
national identities. Such processes again are muddled by the active participation
of ‘minority’ groups, Palestinians of Israeli citizenship who engage passionately
in the construction of Israeli identity and pride through gastronomy. Such
muddled passions together with the fact that hummus easily lends itself to
diverse appropriations and is essentially meant to be shared, leads Avieli to
ponder whether hummus has the potential to serve as a bridge between the
inhabitants of two warring nations and bring an end to enmity via commensality.
Erica J. Peters’ essay unfolds a multi-layered world of everyday strife and
control over food in Vietnam over the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries,
starting with the state and going down to individual families in villages. If
Vietnamese rulers tried to control the countryside through food, often putting
pressure on non-Vietnamese populations to change their eating patterns,
particularly during the time of civil war and food scarcity in the late eighteenth
century, their rivals made a bid for power by seizing government granaries
and giving rice to the starving people. In the nineteenth century, a new crop
of emperors made a new and distinct attempt to control and solidify ‘national’
culture through food, by putting pressure on non-Vietnamese people, not only to
change over to ‘Vietnamese food’ and agriculture, rice in particular, but to learn
to eat sticky rice with chopsticks. The imperial project of creating a ‘civilised’
national culture and cuisine was fraught with tensions. Apart from the fact that
a fragile economy where food scarcity was a recurrent feature made it difficult to
force people to fall in line, the composite mix of Viet, Khmer, Cham and others
in the south with very similar eating habits, made the project of civilising the
‘non-Viet’ people almost impossible.
The struggle for access to and control over food, affirms Peter, was by no
means one of rulers versus subjects: it was played out in villages and within
individual households. If particular households competed to control major
butchering and banqueting rituals, members of a family fought over the daily
apportionment of rice. The sharing of food at common feasts was a way, not
of erasing boundaries of class and status, but of reinforcng them. Women, who
prepared the food for feasts and banquets, did not even sit at the common table
with the men. Such gendered norms got worked out in the way food – especially
sticky rice – was apportioned within the family. The emotional and physical
hunger and desire of women, their need for food and love, found articulation
in popular, irreverent poems composed by female authors. Using food as a lens
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to unpack the distinct and minute gradations within class and social hierarchy,
this chapter offers a rich blend of economics and politics, gender and class, and
power and resistance in Vietnam over two centuries.
In the first essay of the second section on ‘Cooking, Cuisine, Gender’, LeongSalobir emphasises the active and innovative participation of the domestic cook
and servant – the ‘cookie’ – in the development of ‘colonial cuisine’ in Malaysia
and Singapore. Arguing against readings that highlight how the British ate only
‘British’ food in the colonies in order to mark their distance from the colonised,
Leong-Salobir portrays an intricate world of multi-layered interaction between
the memsahib – the mem – the white mistress, and the cookie, that resulted in
the emergence of a colonial cuisine with distinctive dishes, flavours and blends.
In this cuisine, British diet and taste were not only moulded by Asian expertise,
ideas, ingredients and flavours, but also guided by reference to India (South
Asia) as the original source for recipes of decidedly colonial dishes such as the
mulligatawny soup or kedgeree or pishpash, a fact that added interesting twists
and turns to this tale of mishmash.
Class, race, gender and power were worked out on distinct registers in this
multi- and inter-cultural conversation and transposition. If the white memsahib
was entrusted with the difficult and delicate task of running the British household
as an institution of the Empire with a staff of primarily male colonised servants
who needed to be ‘civilised’, the servants deployed their own notions of food
fit for British tastes to create and prepare hybrid dishes that found their way to
colonial dinner tables. For memsahibs, whose husbands were in the lower rungs
of employ and could not depend on cooks and servants, the task of efficient and
competent management of a British home was even more hazardous. LeongSalobir’s absorbing analysis, premised on a close reading of domestic manuals,
recipe books and memoirs and travelogues, offers vistas of a fascinating world of
cross-cultural fertilisation that was often poised on distrust. The white mistress
was ever vigilant of the servants and cooks misuse or abuse of money and
material in the purchase and preparation of ingredients and dishes; the cooks in
turn were suspicious of the memsahibs’ knowledge of proper cooking. This tense
collaboration, where the ‘mem’ spelt out the menu and measured and supplied
the materials for the preparation of food, and the ‘cookie’ cooked, spiced,
flavoured and decided on what was fit to be eaten at different times of the day
and on different occasions, resulted in the emergence and evolution of a distinct
colonial cuisine spread across South and Southeast Asia, which got transported
back to England and to other parts of the globe.
In the following essay, Ishita Banerjee-Dube deftly complements the world
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