Establishing an interdisciplinary connection between Food
Studies and American literary scholarship, Piatti-Farnell
investigates the significances of food and eating in American
fiction, from 1980 to the present day. She argues that
culturally-coded representations of the culinary illuminate
contemporary American anxieties about class gender, race,
tradition, immigration, nationhood, and history. As she offers a
critical analysis of major works of contemporary fiction,
Piatti-Farnell unveils contrasting modes of culinary nostalgia,
disillusionment, and progress that pervasively address the cultural
disintegration of local and familiar culinary values, in favor of
globalized economies of consumption.
In identifying different incarnations of the "American
culinary," Piatti-Farnell covers the depiction of food in specific
categories of American fiction and explores how the cultural
separation that molds food preferences inevitably challenges the
existence of a homogenous American identity. The study treads on
new grounds since it not only provides the first comprehensive
study of food and consumption in contemporary American fiction, but
also aims to expose interrelated politics of consumption in a
variety of authors from different ethnic, cultural, racial and
social backgrounds within the United States.
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