Journal article
"PLEASE PASS THE CHICKEN TITS": RETHINKING MEN AND COOKING AT AN URBAN FIREHOUSE
Food & foodways, v 13(1-2), pp 91-114
09 Mar 2005
Featured in Collection : UN Sustainable Development Goals @ Drexel
Abstract
Women, for centuries, have been the primary cooks and nurturers in most cultures. Men rarely represent family primary food providers. My interest in this study lies in what happens when men who are not food professionals develop into this role of primary cooks for a group of people; in this case, the men of an urban firehouse. Men in this scenario perform in roles typically ascribed to both men and women, and when a woman is involved, her presence is mitigated. I found that the men created a unique food system, and while each brought intact a value system and ethnic heritage to the table, these packages became negotiated, most powerfully in the kitchen and at meals. I was interested in how these men performed in roles that, in our mass consciousness and popular culture, we often ascribe to women. How do they shop, cook, and eat? How do they feel about what they are doing? How and why do they choose to cook? What issues do they face with regard to their identity as men, and how does this influence their food choices, cooking, and eating? Firehouse cooks perform domesticity by relying on multiple versions of masculinity at home and in the fire station.
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Details
- Title
- "PLEASE PASS THE CHICKEN TITS": RETHINKING MEN AND COOKING AT AN URBAN FIREHOUSE
- Creators
- Jonathan Deutsch - Kingsborough Community College
- Publication Details
- Food & foodways, v 13(1-2), pp 91-114
- Publisher
- Taylor & Francis
- Number of pages
- 24
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Language
- English
- Academic Unit
- Food and Hospitality Management
- Web of Science ID
- WOS:000210548700005
- Other Identifier
- 991021888924404721
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- Web of Science research areas
- Anthropology