Description |
1 online resource (xiii, 220 pages) : illustrations. |
Physical Medium |
polychrome |
Description |
text file |
Series |
Pittsburgh series in composition, literacy, and culture
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Pittsburgh series in composition, literacy, and culture.
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Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 173-215) and index. |
Contents |
Introduction: taste and the American cookbook -- Taste and virtue: domestic citizenship and the new republic -- Taste and morality: motherhood and the making of a national body -- Taste and region: the constitutive function of Southern cookbooks -- Taste and science: cooking schools, home economics, and the progressive impulse -- Taste and race: revisions of labor and domestic literacy in the early Twentieth century -- Epilogue: the relevance of taste. |
Summary |
"In Tasteful Domesticity, Sarah Walden demonstrates how women used the cookbook as a rhetorical space. Taste discourse engages cultural values as well a physical constraints, and thus serves as a bridge across the contested space of the self and the body, particularly for women in the nineteenth century. Cook-books represent important contact zones of social philosophies, cultural beliefs, and rhetorical traditions, and through their rhetoric, we witness women's varied roles."--Cover. |
Local Note |
eBooks on EBSCOhost EBSCO eBook Subscription Academic Collection - North America |
Subject |
Rhetoric -- Social aspects.
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Rhetoric -- Social aspects. |
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Rhetoric. |
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Women and literature.
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Women and literature. |
Genre/Form |
Electronic books.
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Added Title |
Women's rhetoric & the American cookbook 1790-1940 |
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Women's rhetoric and the American cookbook 1790-1940 |
ISBN |
9780822983125 (electronic book) |
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0822983125 (electronic book) |
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9780822965138 |
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0822965135 |
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