ECU Libraries Catalog

Recipes for Russia : food and nationhood under the tsars / Alison K. Smith.

Author/creator Smith, Alison Karen
Format Book and Print
Publication InfoDeKalb : Northern Illinois University Press, ©2008.
Descriptionx, 259 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Subject(s)
Contents Ensuring sustenance : the state and the starving peasant -- Making cabbage healthy : dietetics and public health as a national concern -- Describing the Russian diet : ethnography, history, and cultural definition -- Searching for an authority : encyclopedists and the art of translation -- Who is responsible? : master chefs, gentlemen farmers, and progressive patriotism -- Audiences and authorities : Russian housewives and European gastronomes.
Review Smith examines changing attitudes, behaviors, and beliefs about the production and consumption of food in Russia from the late 18th century through the mid 19th century. She focuses on the way that competing ideas based either in "traditional" Russian practice or in new practices from the "rational" West became the basis for Russians' understanding of themselves and their society. The Russians who participated in the process of self-definition were variously private authors and reformers or public servants of the Russian imperial state. Some had great success in creating a sense of themselves as ultimate authorities on a given topic. For example, a series of cookbook authors developed a system of writing Russian cookbooks in ways that borrowed from, but were still quite different from, foreign Sources. Others found the process of mediating these ideas more difficult; agricultural reformers, in particular, sometimes found traditional practices, now deemed irrational, hard to eliminate. Recipes for Russia looks at the process of nation building within the framework of the modern world - that is, it looks at the way individuals sought to define their nationality not only against outside influences but also by incorporating those outside influences into some coherent, yet national, whole. While Smith looks at food as part of Russian culture, she also connects it with the social, legal, and economic background that formed the Culture, while examining the pre-reform period in significant detail. As a result, Recipes For Russia illuminates the great changes of this period, both in the food habits of Russians and in their views of themselves and of their nation.
Bibliography noteIncludes bibliographical references (pages 237-254) and index.
Issued in other formOnline version: Smith, Alison Karen. Recipes for Russia. DeKalb : Northern Illinois University Press, ©2008
LCCN 2007034865
ISBN9780875803814 (clothbound : alk. paper)
ISBN0875803814 (clothbound : alk. paper)

Available Items

Library Location Call Number Status Item Actions
Laupus Books - Stacks GT 2853 R8 S642R 2008 ✔ Available Place Hold