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OverviewThis book offers an account of the emergence of a popular American publication genre in the 1870s – American cookbooks of community and place – as well as a description of early examples that, while differing in matters of format and scale, exhibited traits in common. A majority of such books were produced locally by women working collaboratively in order to effect some change to the good of their communities. Some were simply celebratory of family and friends, providing a means to shape and preserve shared memories via the medium of print. Drawing on experiences in benevolent organizing dating back to the antebellum era, when it can be shown that a few early cookbooks were sold for charitable purposes, self-organizing groups of women drew on their domestic expertise to translate their cultural capital as moral custodians into something more than what they could achieve as individuals. In some cases, identifications of the compilers enable comparisons of socially authored cookbooks that, while bearing distinctive reminders of community and place, proliferated in differing circumstances almost simultaneously, from Maine to California. Nearly always the compilers of cookbooks of community and place chose to reflect some allegiance to locality, whether local, regional, or national, in the naming of venerated recipes or by circumscribing their means of outreach to contributors. At the same time, the discourse of benevolent voluntarism employed in their prefaces and other paratexts sheds light on the evolving scope of these women’s understandings of neighborliness, community, and place. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Mark GermerPublisher: Springer Nature Switzerland AG Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan ISBN: 9783032232625ISBN 10: 3032232627 Publication Date: 13 April 2026 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of Contents1 Introduction.- 2 Social Authorship and Consciousness of Place.- 3 Practices in Common, Alignments with Commerce, & Imaginings of National Community.- 4 The Framework of Benevolence and Ladies’ Fairs.- 5 New Chapters Intercalated With the Old.- 6 Postlude.ReviewsAuthor InformationMark Germer served for twenty-four years as Music Librarian and Senior Lecturer in the Division of Humanities at the University of the Arts in Philadelphia, USA. His doctoral and post-doctoral research centered around the interactions of church and folk music in Central Europe during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. He also taught and consulted in the fields of music bibliography, collections analysis, and intellectual property. After retiring he researched and catalogued manuscripts, ephemera, and rare printed materials for Rabelais Printed & Manuscript Cookery in Biddeford, Maine. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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