Culinary Tourism

Author:   Lucy M. Long
Publisher:   The University Press of Kentucky
ISBN:  

9780813129853


Pages:   320
Publication Date:   15 September 2010
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Out of print, replaced by POD   Availability explained
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Culinary Tourism


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Full Product Details

Author:   Lucy M. Long
Publisher:   The University Press of Kentucky
Imprint:   The University Press of Kentucky
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.475kg
ISBN:  

9780813129853


ISBN 10:   0813129850
Pages:   320
Publication Date:   15 September 2010
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of print, replaced by POD   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufatured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Reviews

<p> One leaves Culinary Tourism with a deeper understanding of some of food's complex relationships to the politics of culture. --Ethnologies --


Culinary Tourism is a welcome and provocative addition to the literature on foodways and tourism. -- Yvonne R. Lockwood Journal of American Folklore


Culinary Tourism is a welcome and provocative addition to the literature on foodways and tourism. --Yvonne R. Lockwood, Journal of American Folklore -- One leaves Culinary Tourism with a deeper understanding of some of food's complex relationships to the politics of culture. --Ethnologies -- A collection of articles which, without being heavy (like chocolate cake gone bad) or not-quite-there (like a flattened souffl ), takes you places by giving you an idea of the way people differ in what they eat yet similar in how it tastes. --Rockland (ME) Courier-Gazette -- Culinary Tourism is based upon and extends well-established concepts of folk culture in its social and material aspects, and the book abounds in fresh examples of food-related expression. --Western Folklore -- Folklorists and scholars should appreciate this collection of essays on the ways in which food and travel intersect. -Publishers Weekly -- Twelve different writers discuss how restaurants and festivals market food to tourists, politics of the food industry, authentic southwest cooking, and food choices of various groups such as baby boomers and Mormon missionaries. --Kentucky Living -- Recommended. --Choice -- . . .Long's Culinary Tourism demonstrate[s] how food becomes the central lure for tourists seeking exotic foods in restaurants, festivals, stores, and even participatory cooking experiences. --Choice -- Serves a real purpose and deserves a respected place in the historical record. --Register of the Kentucky Historical Society -- Contributors to the book are widely recognized food experts who encourage readers to venture outside the comforts of home and embark on new eating experiences. --Lexington Herald-Leader -- Nonanthropologist readers... will discover the unexpected and fascinating terrain of food as an index of human culture. -Virginia Quarterly ReviewThis volume is a welcome collection of essays. --Gastronomica -- As the study of tourism proper attends more closely to lived experience, and as the study of food continues to explore its tranactional character, these fields will find in Culinary Tourism a powerful conceptual framework with rich case studies. --Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblatt --


<p> Culinary Tourism is a welcome and provocative addition to the literature on foodways and tourism. --Yvonne R. Lockwood, Journal of American Folklore --


Culinary Tourism is a welcome and provocative addition to the literature on foodways and tourism. --Yvonne R. Lockwood, Journal of American Folklore -- One leaves Culinary Tourism with a deeper understanding of some of food's complex relationships to the politics of culture. --Ethnologies -- A collection of articles which, without being heavy (like chocolate cake gone bad) or not-quite-there (like a flattened souffl ), takes you places by giving you an idea of the way people differ in what they eat yet similar in how it tastes. --Rockland (ME) Courier-Gazette -- . . .Long's Culinary Tourism demonstrate[s] how food becomes the central lure for tourists seeking exotic foods in restaurants, festivals, stores, and even participatory cooking experiences. --Choice -- Serves a real purpose and deserves a respected place in the historical record. --Register of the Kentucky Historical Society -- Contributors to the book are widely recognized food experts who encourage readers to venture outside the comforts of home and embark on new eating experiences. --Lexington Herald-Leader -- As the study of tourism proper attends more closely to lived experience, and as the study of food continues to explore its tranactional character, these fields will find in Culinary Tourism a powerful conceptual framework with rich case studies. --Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblatt -- Culinary Tourism is based upon and extends well-established concepts of folk culture in its social and material aspects, and the book abounds in fresh examples of food-related expression. --Western Folklore -- Folklorists and scholars should appreciate this collection of essays on the ways in which food and travel intersect. -Publishers Weekly -- Twelve different writers discuss how restaurants and festivals market food to tourists, politics of the food industry, authentic southwest cooking, and food choices of various groups such as baby boomers and Mormon missionaries. --Kentucky Living -- Nonanthropologist readers... will discover the unexpected and fascinating terrain of food as an index of human culture. -Virginia Quarterly ReviewThis volume is a welcome collection of essays. --Gastronomica -- Recommended. --Choice --


One leaves Culinary Tourism with a deeper understanding of some of food's complex relationships to the politics of culture. --Ethnologies --


Author Information

Lucy M. Long teaches folklore and food studies in the International Studies and American Culture Studies Programs at Bowling Green State University in Ohio. She is the editor of the American Folklore Society's foodways section journal, Digest.

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