Publisher's Synopsis
This book delves into the cultural implications of women’s engagement with food and cooking. In doing this, it also tackles related issues such as the female body, women’s appetites, and imaginary projections of their own displacement, exile, (dis)orderly behaviour(s), culinary witchcraft, magic and cannibalism. From food disorders, the book veers onto how they are transcended and alchemically transformed into food aesthetics and poetics. Thus, it invites scholars, students and a wider public interested in an interdisciplinary and intersectional approach to women’s studies, food studies and media studies to explore the complexity, diversity and shiftiness of food cultures and women’s engagement in food practices. What makes this collection of essays stand out is its focus on the Balkans (and particularly Romania) as a pivotal point in a comparative cross-cultural discussion.