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Getting What We Need Ourselves Jennifer Jensen Wallach, of How America Eats A Social History of US Food and Culture

Getting What We Need Ourselves By Jennifer Jensen Wallach,  of How America Eats A Social History of US Food and Culture

Getting What We Need Ourselves by Jennifer Jensen Wallach, of How America Eats A Social History of US Food and Culture


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Summary

This multi-generational story begins before the transatlantic slave trade in West Africa and ends with a discussion of contemporary African American vegans. Demonstrating that food has been both a tool of empowerment and a weapon of white supremacy, this study documents the symbolic power of food alongside an ongoing struggle for food access.

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Getting What We Need Ourselves Summary

Getting What We Need Ourselves: How Food Has Shaped African American Life by Jennifer Jensen Wallach, of How America Eats A Social History of US Food and Culture

Beginning with an examination of West African food traditions during the era of the transatlantic slave trade and ending with a discussion of black vegan activism in the twenty-first century, Getting What We Need Ourselves: How Food Has Shaped African American Life tells a multi-faceted food story that goes beyond the well-known narrative of southern-derived soul food as the predominant form of black food expression. While this book considers the provenance and ongoing cultural resonance of emblematic foods such as greens and cornbread, it also examines the experiences of African Americans who never embraced such foods or who rejected them in search of new tastes and new symbols that were less directly tied to the past of plantation slavery. This book tells the story of generations of cooks and eaters who worked to create food habits that they variously considered sophisticated, economical, distinctly black, all-American, ethical, and healthful in the name of benefiting the black community. Significantly, it also chronicles the enduring struggle of impoverished eaters who worried far more about having enough to eat than about what particular food filled their plates. Finally, it considers the experiences of culinary laborers, whether enslaved, poorly paid domestic servants, tireless entrepreneurs, or food activists and intellectuals who used their knowledge and skills to feed and educate others, making a lasting imprint on American food culture in the process. Throughout African American history, food has both been used as a tool of empowerment and wielded as a weapon. Beginning during the era of slavery, African American food habits have often served as a powerful means of cementing the bonds of community through the creation of celebratory and affirming shared rituals. However, the system of white supremacy has frequently used food, or often the lack of it, as a means to attempt to control or subdue the black community. This study demonstrates that African American eaters who have worked to creative positive representations of black food practices have simultaneously had to confront an elaborate racist mythology about black culinary inferiority and difference. Keeping these tensions in mind, empty plates are as much a part of the history this book sets out to narrate as full ones, and positive characterizations of black foodways are consistently put into dialogue with distorted representations created by outsiders. Together these stories reveal a rich and complicated food history that defies simple stereotypes and generalizations.

Getting What We Need Ourselves Reviews

Getting What We Need Ourselves should be required reading for all students of American foodways-and for that matter, anyone interested in the complex set of behaviors we call 'American cuisine.' Within these pages, Jen Wallach exquisitely crafts an important-and readable---overview of one of the most important, and little recognized, voices in the American food landscape-that of African Americans-and in doing so, carefully notes the many scholars and writers who have painstakingly contributed to this history. This is a rich, moving, poignant, and timely history of our nation via the expressive power of food in and beyond the African American experience. -- Marcie Cohen Ferris, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Sweeping in scope yet telling in details, Getting What We Need for Ourselves masterfully introduces the importance of food in African American history. Jennifer Wallach explores the everyday uses of and meanings behind food in a way that is sophisticated and nuanced, deeply grounded in historical sources and current literature, and still accessible and richly satisfying. Through her prose, Wallach proves herself a premier teacher of African American foodways, and readers will learn a great deal. -- Rebecca Sharpless, Texas Christian University
Cutting through the obfuscations that so often accompany stories of Southern cooking, Wallach provides a polyvocal history of African American foodways from origins on the African continent to today's high-end Harlem eateries, disrupting and complicating any notion of a single story of African American identity. Rather than a search for a single narrative thread to draw a straight line from then to now, Wallach's goal seems to be to multiply the threads and to sever some that have been drawn too tightly and conveniently, all with a prose style that is effortless and engaging. -- Carrie Helms Tippen, Chatham University
Mapping the journey of African Americans' cooking practices, memories about food, and rhetorical significance people give to foods, Getting What We Need Ourselves, crates a cartography that highlights the multiple routes and roots that lead to defining the complex, complicated and often contradictory nature of claim certain foods as those defining an ethnic group. Wallach offers a candid reminder of the dangers in oversimplifying any eating practices of a giving ethnic group or region or nation to that only reflect misunderstanding and promote racial essentializing: African Americans eat watermelon, fried chicken, pork and cornbread. She challenges this tendency by tracing how the foodways of African and African American people have had and has historical, political, and ideological trajectories that have never been just one single story. Wallach adds a great contribution to the fields of Food Studies and Ethnic Studies with the reminder that a group of people's food practices, memories about food and symbolism given to food are always never static, but always changing according to concrete historical, political, economic and geographical realities. -- Meredith E. Abarca, author of Voices in the Kitchen

About Jennifer Jensen Wallach, of How America Eats A Social History of US Food and Culture

Jennifer Jensen Wallach is associate professor of history at the University of North Texas. She is the author, most recently, of How America Eats: A Social History of U.S. Food and Culture and Richard Wright: From Black Boy to World Citizen. She is also the editor of the University of Arkansas Press' Food and Foodways series.

Table of Contents

Contents Introduction Chapter 1: Culinary Exchanges and Origins during the Transatlantic Slave Trade Chapter 2: Africanisms and Adaptation during the Era of Slavery Chapter 3: Foodways, Resiliency, and White Supremacy after the Civil War Chapter 4: The Quest to Cook and Eat with Dignity during the Jim Crow Era Chapter 5: The Search for a Common Table during the Great Depression and World War II Chapter 6: Food as Politics during the Black Freedom Struggle Epilogue Bibliography About the Author

Additional information

CIN1442253908G
9781442253902
1442253908
Getting What We Need Ourselves: How Food Has Shaped African American Life by Jennifer Jensen Wallach, of How America Eats A Social History of US Food and Culture
Used - Good
Hardback
Rowman & Littlefield
20190801
238
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - Getting What We Need Ourselves