Visiting speaker: Professor Sami ZUBAIDA (Birkbeck College, London)
Imagining National Cuisine: Middle Eastern Food and Identity
Middle Eastern food cultures are products of geography, ecology and the mixing and syntheses of historical empires, the most recent being the Ottoman. The discourses of the emerging nation-states and their imagination have included assertion of national and ethnic cuisine: Turkish (or ‘Ottoman’), Iranian, Lebanese, Iraqi, or Arab, Armenian and Kurdish, with implications of historical roots going back centuries. I argue that food cultures are related more to geography than ethnicity or nation, and that what we eat now is the product of historical transformations more than continuities, such as the import of New World products, notably the tomato, and more recent globalised exchanges and innovations. And what is ‘Mediterranean cuisine’?
An Institute of Arab and Islamic Studies lecture | |
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Date | 18 November 2015 |
Time | 17:15 |
Place | Institute of Arabic and Islamic Studies, LT1 and LT2 This is a free lecture with no registration required. Tea and coffee will be served in the IAIS Common Room at 16.30 with the lecture to start at 17.15. |
Provider | Institute of Arab and Islamic Studies |
Event details
Location:
Institute of Arabic and Islamic Studies, LT1 and LT2