essay
Playing with food: the negotiation of identity in the ethnic display event by Italian Americans in Clinton, Indiana
studies in italian american folklore • Logan, Utah • Published In 1993 • Pages: 107-126
By: Magliocco, Sabina, Del Guidice, Lusia.
Abstract
Foodways are "…one of the most important symbols through which ethnic groups in America have maintained their individual identities and communicated them to the world around them"…(pp. 107-108). In this paper Magliocco examines food symbolically especially in regard to its significance in the Little Italy Festival carried out in a multiethnic community in which the various foods are chosen by the Italian American community as representative of their ethnic identity.. Magliocco examines four different categories of food present at the festival: "… esoteric foods, present at the private level in each Italian American home; display foods, typically associated with Italians and presented for public sale and consumption; rechristened foods, basically American items, such as soda pop and ham sandwiches, which are given Italian designations for this occasion; and pseudo-foods, such as large wooden 'cheeses,' used mostly in games and contests associated with the festival. Each category of food plays a different role in the display of symbolic ethnicity and the maintenance of ethnic identity " (p. 108).
- HRAF PubDate
- 2000
- Region
- North America
- Sub Region
- Regional, Ethnic and Diaspora Cultures
- Document Type
- essay
- Evaluation
- Creator Type
- Unknown
- Document Rating
- 5: Excellent Primary Data
- Analyst
- John Beierle ; 1999
- Field Date
- fall 1983
- Coverage Date
- 1895-1983
- Coverage Place
- Clinton, Indiana, United States
- Notes
- Sabina Magliocco
- Includes bibliographical references (p. 124-126)
- LCCN
- 93021459
- LCSH
- Italian Americans