The Making of Mamaliga

Alex Drace-Francis (red.)
Titel
The Making of Mamaliga
Subtitel
Transimperial Recipes for a Romanian National Dish
Prijs
€ 122,00 excl. BTW
ISBN
9789633865835
Uitvoering
Hardback
Aantal pagina's
226
Taal
Engels
Publicatiedatum
Afmetingen
15.2 x 22.9 cm
Categorieën
Imprint
Inhoudsopgave
Toon inhoudsopgaveVerberg inhoudsopgave

List of Maps, Graphs, Tables 

Introduction: The Land is Waiting 

Chapter 1. From the Caribbean to the Carpathians: The Coming of Cucuruz, c.1492-1700 

Chapter 2. Conquerors, Cultivators, and Collaborators: Maize at Empire’s Edge, 1700-1774 

Chapter 3. Conflict, Contagion and Commerce: The Triumph of Maize, 1774-1812 

Chapter 4. Maize, Raki or Death: The Revolt of 1821 Reconsidered 

Chapter 5. Mămăligă 2.0: Maize on the World Market, 1821-1856 

Chapter 6. Independence, Capitalism, Disease and Revolt; Or, Why the Mămăligă Exploded, 1856-1907 

Chapter 7. Manna valachorum: Recipes at the Interface 

Chapter 8. ‘The sparrow dreams of cornmeal, and the idle man of a day of rest’: Mămăligă as Metaphor 

Conclusion: The Land is Waiting 

Appendix: Words and Things
Glossary
 
Mămăligography 
Illustration Credits
Acknowledgements
Index 

Alex Drace-Francis (red.)

The Making of Mamaliga

Transimperial Recipes for a Romanian National Dish

De onderstaande tekst is niet beschikbaar in het Nederlands en wordt in het Engels weergegeven.

Mămăligă, maize porridge or polenta, is a universally consumed dish in Romania and a prominent national symbol. But its unusual history has rarely been told. Alex Drace-Francis surveys the arrival and spread of maize cultivation in Romanian lands from Ottoman times to the eve of the First World War, and also the image of mămăligă in art and popular culture. Drawing on a rich array of sources and with many new findings, Drace-Francis shows how the making of mămăligă has been shaped by global economic forces and overlapping imperial systems of war and trade. 

The story of maize and mămăligă provides an accessible way to revisit many key questions of Romanian and broader regional history. More generally, the book links the history of production, consumption, and representation. Analyses of recipes, literary and popular depictions, and key vocabulary complete the work.

Redacteur

Alex Drace-Francis

Alex Drace-Francis is Associate Professor of Modern European Literary and Cultural History at the University of Amsterdam. He has published widely on eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Romanian and Balkan social, cultural and literary history; on travel writing and circulation of ideas and images; and on European identity as a whole.