Kitchen Literacy: How We Lost Knowledge of Where Food Comes From and Why We Need to Get It Back
by Ann Vileisis
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 38)
bookshelves:
food,
nonfiction
Read in June, 2008
Well-researched American Studiesesque approach to an analysis of the rise of industrialized food production/distribution in the US. Vileisis begins by looking at Martha Ballard's diary (Ballard's 18th century recordings of her daily life as a midwife was initially transcribed and researched by Laurel Thatcher Ulrich and placed Ballard's experience within the context of the rise of and acceptance of medicine as a reputable field dominated by men and its subsequent appropriation of the previously ...more
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Read in June, 2008
recommends it for:
Foodies, advertisers, greenies
A bulk of this book is about how marketing (which differs from the original definition of going to the market to shop) has transformed long held beliefs on food production from close-to-home, in-house to "sanitary is better" factory foods and back again. The section on house Chicago beef producers convinced shoppers that the meat shipped from afar was not "dead beef", but a cheap, quality, and easy thing to buy. I also enjoyed reading how DDT became so prevalent as an insec...more
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Read in March, 2008
recommends it for:
anyone interested in this topic
I read this book very slowly and didn't quite finish because I had to turn it into the library already. I did like it, though I like a quicker read usually. What I really loved about this book is that the author researched and references throughout the book many different types of sources of the eras she is writing about. She cites cookbooks, magazines, memoirs, advertisements, etc. The author did her homework, and throughout the book you get a good sense of the historical events and societa...more
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Read in August, 2008
I really wanted to like this book. But it fell flat. The writing style was just very dry and boring, even though I am quite interested in the subject matter. I don't feel that the "Why We Need to Get It Back" part was covered nearly enough.
The only bit I found really interesting in this book was the part about the founder of Home Ec, and how she was the first female chemistry major at MIT.
And the only thing I came away from the book wondering was, what was the recipe for t...more
The only bit I found really interesting in this book was the part about the founder of Home Ec, and how she was the first female chemistry major at MIT.
And the only thing I came away from the book wondering was, what was the recipe for t...more
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2 comments
bookshelves:
food-justice,
mydissertation,
non-fiction
Read in August, 2008
Michael Pollan ask questions about our current relationship to food. Ann Vileisis explains how we got to where we are. Don't read one without the other!
This book synthesized a lot of environmental history in a very reader friendly way. The book begins with "A Meal By Martha." Remember Ulrich's A Midwife's Tale? Same Martha! It continues through the present day. You'll learn about the history of cookbooks in the U.S. and the history of the grocery store.
This book synthesized a lot of environmental history in a very reader friendly way. The book begins with "A Meal By Martha." Remember Ulrich's A Midwife's Tale? Same Martha! It continues through the present day. You'll learn about the history of cookbooks in the U.S. and the history of the grocery store.
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currently-reading
I actually got to meet the author who is really nice and we chatted about environmental history (which is what this book is really) and how she became a freelance writer. Very interesting idea and very relevant as we begin to think about reducing our emissions and understanding how much energy goes into moving our food around the globe.
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bookshelves:
cooking-and-gardening
Read in August, 2008
I highly recommend this history of the American table. The book doesn't just discuss all the marketing involved in convincing us what is good to eat, it documents exactly how and why we eat the way we do. Anyone who needs further convincing that eating local and growing your own food is the way to go, must read this book.
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recommends it for:
people interested in food
I unfortunately had to return this book to the library. Someone else had it on hold. I only read about the first 100 pages, but what I read, I liked. In some ways, a bit like Michael Pollan's In Defense of Food, but it starts from a different point. Hope to get back to it, so I'll keep it on my "currently-reading" shelf.
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bookshelves:
ecology,
food,
politics
Read in March, 2008
It's incredibly depressing to read about the agriculture activism of the 1970s, which sounds almost exactly like the current model, and realise that we have it all to do again and more. /o\ It would have four stars if it went further into the implications of fucked-up food policy, but I realise that wasn't her main aim.
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Read in August, 2008
recommended to Alyssa by:
Jennifer
I didn't actually finish this one. While the historical look at how our food evolved was interesting, after reading Pollan and Kingsolver, her narrative was a bit dry and difficult to keep up with. It was due at the library and I couldn't renew and it's not worth the effort to put myself on the reserve list again.
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This book tells the story of how Americans lost their connection to their food. It tells about the rise of grocery stores. It was very informative. I used elements of it as the base for a Farm to Table class that I taught to 4-6 graders, even though it is at a much higher reading level.
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bookshelves:
food-history,
local-foods
recommends it for: food-loving friends
Read in June, 2008
recommended to Jennifer by:
found on Eating Liberallyrecommends it for: food-loving friends
This historical and cultural overview of American cooking and food-sourcing provides a good follow-up to Michael Pollan's In Defense of Food. If you wonder how we came to rely so much on food marketing -- for better and for worse -- read this!
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Read in February, 2008
recommends it for:
eaters and shoppers of food
Drags a little in places, but full of history and illustrations on how we got to where we are now and some good suggestions on restoring health and sanity to the advertising, shopping, and growing of food.
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Read in March, 2008
This book has valuable documentation about American food history and our path to losing knowledge about what we eat. A good resource for information to support local food systems.
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eye-opening - an easy-to-ready history of our migration from agrarian life to city life and how our food systems have changed along the way...up to present day.
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Fascinating history of how we (or our kitchens) evolved. Definitely made me ponder (& appreciate) the difference between "food industry" and "agri-culture".
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I never read non-fiction but this book jumped off the library shelf at me. It very interesting, even without a plot.
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