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Kitchenspace: Women, Fiestas, and Everyday Life in Central Mexico

Kitchenspace: Women, Fiestas, and Everyday Life in Central Mexico

Current price: $32.95
Publication Date: November 1st, 2011
Publisher:
University of Texas Press
ISBN:
9780292739369
Pages:
334

Description

Throughout the world, the kitchen is the heart of family and community life. Yet, while everyone has a story to tell about their grandmother's kitchen, the myriad activities that go on in this usually female world are often devalued, and little scholarly attention has been paid to this crucial space in which family, gender, and community relations are forged and maintained. To give the kitchen the prominence and respect it merits, Maria Elisa Christie here offers a pioneering ethnography of kitchenspace in three central Mexican communities, Xochimilco, Ocotepec, and Tetecala.

Christie coined the term "kitchenspace" to encompass both the inside kitchen area in which everyday meals for the family are made and the larger outside cooking area in which elaborate meals for community fiestas are prepared by many women working together. She explores how both kinds of meal preparation create bonds among family and community members. In particular, she shows how women's work in preparing food for fiestas gives women status in their communities and creates social networks of reciprocal obligation. In a culture rigidly stratified by gender, Christie concludes, kitchenspace gives women a source of power and a place in which to transmit the traditions and beliefs of older generations through quasi-sacramental food rites.

About the Author

Maria Elisa Christie is Program Director for Women in International Development at Virginia Tech's Office of International Research, Education, and Development.

Praise for Kitchenspace: Women, Fiestas, and Everyday Life in Central Mexico

This book makes an important addition to the emerging feminist literature on culinary labour.... Christie has conveyed an invaluable perspective on society, ecology and even cosmology through the words of hardworking Mexican women.
— Journal of Latin American Studies