HI2A7-30 A Global History of Food
Introductory description
Eating is a deeply human activity. Language, and the human species itself, perhaps developed out of our desire to cook and share food. Yet the way we eat now may be destroying important aspects of human society and the environment itself. How did we get into this mess?
Module aims
This 30 CATS undergraduate second-year option module explores the long history of the production, marketing and consumption of food, from ancient times to the present, from vegetarianism to the first battery chicken. It provides a framework for thinking about the place of food and eating within historical analysis. The module considers food from multiple overlapping perspectives - ethics, labour, environment, community, power, health, hunger and science - to help contextualise our current attitudes to food, and to introduce important historical concepts (from 'moral economies' to 'biopolitics') relevant to all areas of historical analysis.
Outline syllabus
This is an indicative module outline only to give an indication of the sort of topics that may be covered. Actual sessions held may differ.
- Introduction: Food as a Total Social Fact
- A Brief History of Agriculture
- Colonialism, Improvement and Economic Botany
- Famine, Entitlement and Inequality
- Industrial Food and Imperialism
- Reading Week (no lecture or seminar)
- Vegetarianism
- The Cookbook as Document
- Authenticity, Tradition and Nationalism
- Restaurants
- Calories, Vitamins and Nutritional Science
- Cooking at Home: Technologies
- Developmentalism, Green Revolutions, and GMOs
- Religion
- Feeding Cities: Markets, Supermarkets, and Urban Gardens
- Reading Week (no lecture or seminar)
- Neoliberalism, Food Security and Food Sovereignty
- Dieting, Discipline and Fat as a Feminist Issue
- The Art of Food
- Food and the Environment
- Revision Session
Learning outcomes
By the end of the module, students should be able to:
- Demonstrate a detailed knowledge of historical and theoretical interpretations of the study of the global history of food.
- Communicate ideas and findings, adapting to a range of situations, audiences and degrees of complexity.
- Generate ideas through the analysis of a broad range of primary source material for the study of the global history of food, including electronic resources.
- Analyse and evaluate the contributions made by existing scholarship.
- Act with limited supervision and direction within defined guidelines, accepting responsibility for achieving deadlines.
Indicative reading list
- Adams, Carol, The Sexual Politics of Meat: A Feminist-Vegetarian Critical Theory (London, 2015). • Belasco, Warren and Philip Scranton, eds., Food Nations: Selling Taste in Consumer Societies (London, 2002). • DiMeo, Michelle, and Sara Pennell, eds., Reading and Writing Recipe Books 1550-1800 (Manchester, 2013). • Floyd, Janet, and Laurel Forster, eds., The Recipe Reader (London, 2004). • Gabaccia, Donna, We Are What We Eat: Ethnic Food and the Making of Americans (Cambridge, 1998). • Harris, Marvin, Good to Eat: Riddles of Food and Culture (1998). • Johnston, Josée, and Shyon Baumann, Foodies: Democracy and Distinction in the Gourmet Foodscape (New York, 2009). • Khare, R.S., The Eternal Food: Gastronomic Ideas and Experiences of Hindus and Buddhists, State University of New York (Albany, 1992). • Laudan, Rachael, Cuisine and Empire: Cooking in World History, University of California Press (Berkeley, 2013) • Malaguzzi, Silvia, Food and Feasting in Art (2008). • Neuhaus, Jessamyn, Manly Meals and Mom’s Home Cooking: Cookbooks and Gender in Modern America (Baltimore, 2003). • Orbach, Susie, Fat is a Feminist Issue, Paddington Press (New York, 1978) • Panayi, P., Spicing Up Britain: The Multicultural History of British Food (London, 2008). • Ranta, Ronald and Ichijo, Atsuko, eds., Food, National Identity and Nationalism: From the Everyday to the Global, Palgrave Macmillan (London, 2016). • Schanbacer, William, The Politics of Food: The Global Conflict between Food Security and Food Sovereignty (Santa Barbara, 2010). • Theophano, Janet, Eat My Words: Reading Women’s Lives Through the Cookbooks They Wrote (New York, 2002). • Vernon, James, Hunger: A Modern History (Cambridge, 2007). • Walvin, James, Fruits of Empire: Exotic Produce and British Taste, 1660-1800 (Basingstoke, 1997).
View reading list on Talis Aspire
Subject specific skills
See learning outcomes.
Transferable skills
See learning outcomes.
Study time
Type | Required |
---|---|
Lectures | 20 sessions of 1 hour (7%) |
Seminars | 20 sessions of 1 hour (7%) |
Tutorials | 2 sessions of 1 hour (1%) |
Other activity | 2 hours (1%) |
Private study | 256 hours (85%) |
Total | 300 hours |
Private study description
History modules require students to undertake extensive independent research and reading to prepare for seminars and assessments. As a rough guide, students will be expected to read and prepare to comment on three substantial texts (articles or book chapters) for each seminar taking approximately 3 hours. Each assessment requires independent research, reading around 6-10 texts and writing and presenting the outcomes of this preparation in an essay, review, presentation or other related task.
Other activity description
Revision seminar.
Costs
No further costs have been identified for this module.
You must pass all assessment components to pass the module.
Assessment group D1
Weighting | Study time | Eligible for self-certification | |
---|---|---|---|
Seminar contribution | 10% | No | |
1500 word essay | 10% | Yes (extension) | |
3000 word essay | 40% | Yes (extension) | |
7 day take-home assessment | 40% | No |
Feedback on assessment
¿ written feedback on essay and exam cover sheets\r\n¿ student/tutor dialogues in one-to-one tutorials
Courses
This module is Optional for:
- Year 2 of UENA-VQ32 Undergraduate English and History
This module is Option list B for:
- Year 2 of UHIA-V100 Undergraduate History