Schedule of Readings & Assignments

General suggestions

Colored boxes

Videos

All videos will be posted on the course YouTube channel, and I will post link to them on the schedule page under the appropriate day as they become available. If you want announcements of new videos, please subscribe to the channel. The videos are NOT posted in Canvas itself.

Noteworthy is optional

Most days have a “noteworthy” section that lists a few relevant readings on the topic. These are optional! Most have some good ideas that I’ll mention in the videos; others are there just for additional materials and extra credit opportunities. If you spend time with any that seem interesting to you, be sure to mention them in your reflection or quiz so you can get extra credit for that work.

Week 1

Jun 6

Course introductions

Our task for today is to make sure you know how the course is structured and general expectations.

Jun 7

Challenges and Rewards of Food + History

I think this whole course makes more sense when you understand how and why people study food the way they do. So that’s what today is about, complemented by the Haley reading that argues we should resist the urge to romanticize the culinary past as is so often done in food media because: A) it’s never that simple and B) the real history is far more interesting and revealing.

Noteworthy

Jun 8

National Cuisine & American Food

The goal for today is to complicate the idea of “American” food through an investigation of national cuisine generally and ways of thinking about it. There are an unusually high number of readings for today, but they are all quite short and offer unique perspectives that are worth thinking about together.

Noteworthy

Jun 9

Authenticity

Almost everyone thinks about whether some kind of food or dish is “authentic” from time to time. But what does that really mean? The few readings for today should help us think more carefully notions of authenticity—particularly how it’s paradoxically an entirely superficial way of describing food, but still a very powerful one.

Noteworthy

Jun 10

Cuisines of Contact & Thanksgiving

Week 2

Jun 13

Corn, Cuisine, Identity

Corn may be the ultimate American food: We make a LOT of it, most of which is for cheap animal feed so we can have cheap meat. Corn and derived products are essential to processed food to make them cheap, safe, convenient, and readily available It perfectly embodies the application of technology to food and the constant pursuit of innovation.

It’s also a prime example of how much food can change meanings. As you’ll read about, comparing meanings and uses of corn in Native American traditions and early new England settlements with corn production in 20th century–it’s kind of mind blowing what an incredibly transformation it’s been.

Hopefully after the readings for today you’ll think back to our authenticity readings, and how much to these stories complicate the idea there is any authentic dish anywhere, ever.

Noteworthy

Jun 14

Early America, Food, and Households

Noteworthy

Jun 15

Expansion and Immigration

Jun 16

History from Cookbooks

Noteworthy

Some cookbooks mentioned in the readings

Jun 17

Improving Nature

Today we look at an interesting early connection between food, health, and technology that still influences our food choices.

Noteworthy

Week 3

Jun 20

Nutrition, Economy, and Citizenship

No video for today, so a little longer syllabus introduction than usual: Building off Friday’s video and theme of how dietary and moral advice are frequently intertwined, today we look at how popularization of nutritional science provided the perfect “objective” rationale for telling the working classes (and especially immigrants) how they should eat. As we’ll see, the goal seems to have been as much as about health as it was to encourage immigrants to be more economically efficient, and therefore more moral and more American in their food choices. This topic may seem unique to the early 19th century and immigration, but even in 2022, a healthier body is still often thought of as a “better” body. The health industry is worth a gazillion dollars in part because it’s not just about health!

The idea that we should make decisions on what to eat based on a supposedly objective metric of health has been labelled nutritionism—an ISM like catholocism, totalitarianism—an IDEOLOGY of food and how to eat. There is even an official disorder called orthorexia—wanting to eat “right”. This is often presented as a relatively new (last 40 or 50 years at most) phenomenon, but it actually has a long 120+ year history. It is striking that considering how much culture is very different now, and nutritional knowledge has advanced considerably since ~1900, the idea that we can assess and measure morality through food, diet, and health has persisted remarkably well.

Jun 21

Industrializing Meat

Jun 22

REST DAY!

Jun 23

Untangling Food in the Southwest

As you are all well aware, the Southwest has a pretty amazing mix of foodways. While we’ve read in general terms about blending of food traditions, today is a more specific case study of blending (and not) in our own neck of the woods. Two primary goals: 1) Learn more about the various historical traditions of food in the Southwest; 2) Look in more depth at a specific region as a site of adaptation and resistance to new foods.

Noteworthy

Jun 24

Culinary Diffusion

Yesterday we looked at the intersection of food traditions in the Southwest, and today we look at food moving out of specific regions. We’ve already covered this a little with our reading on Chinese food in the 19th century, but here focus specifically on diffusion as a general concept and how meanings of food get twisted as food moves around geographies and cultures.

Week 4

Jun 27

Culinary Appropriation

I find most culinary appropriation conversations to be unhelpfully superficial. It is pointless to debate whether culinary/cultural appropriation actually happens (it does), or whether it’s just some people being overly sensitive (it is), or whether it can be an inadvertent or purposeful tool of marginalization (it can). These are non-debatable facts. What matters for today is how we can learn to think and talk about appropriation in a sufficiently nuanced way that encourages innovation and adaptation in terms of food while simultaneously respecting cultural heritage and meanings.

Noteworthy

Jun 28

Counter Cuisine

Noteworthy

Jun 29

No video or new reading for today! Food Blog Analysis is due.

Jun 30

Wrapping up

July 1 (Friday)

Nothing!

Keep working on your Final Course Reflection.

July 2 (Saturday)

Last official day of the class, but you can have the rest of the weekend (+ Monday) to work on your last reflection.

July 5 (TUESDAY!)

Your FINAL Learning Reflection—over the WHOLE CLASS—needs to be turned in BY THE END OF TODAY. See the Final Course Reflection Guide. I can’t emphasize enough that this SHOULD NOT BE MERELY A SUMMARY of what we’ve covered. Instead, as the instructions explain in more detail, illustrate how your thinking about food has changed over the month, and how your submitted work justifies what you think should be your overall grade for the course.