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Experiencing Multiplicity: food and identity

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Title: Experiencing Multiplicity: food and identity


1
Experiencing Multiplicity food and identity
  • Minjoo Oh

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  • Tell me what you eat, I will tell you who you
    are.
  • Can you tell who I am if I tell you what I eat?

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  • Body
  • Home
  • Community
  • City
  • Region
  • National
  • Global

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  • French wine and Turkish coffee houses represent
    suitable cultural metaphors for learning how to
    do business with those countries.
  • Drinking Guinness is a strong connotation of
    Irishness.

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  • Rice as the staple of Japanese diet has a special
    centrality in national identity formation Rice
    as Self (1993) by Emiko Ohnuki-Tierney

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  • What items constitute the Japanese diet?

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  • What is archetypal American food?

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  • American
  • homogeneous, processed, mass-produced food
  • The multi-ethnic mixtures of particular regions

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Jennifer Lee hunts for General Tao
  • http//www.ted.com/talks/lang/eng/jennifer_8_lee_l
    ooks_for_general_tso.html

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  • The longer we ponder questions like these, the
    more difficult they become to answer.
  • National cuisines are in a process of constant
    reinvention, absorbing new influences and letting
    some traditions die out.

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  • Nevertheless, a nations diet can have a key role
    to play in nationalistic sentiments, with
    threatened invasions of filthy foreign food
    being seen as dangerous to the whole fabric of
    national identity.

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  • At the same time, national cuisines are often
    celebrated for their exotic difference.
  • Sometimes a nations identity is captured by a
    single food item.
  • For instance, curry is synonymous with India. In
    other cases, it is the manner of cooking as much
    as the ingredients and final dishes with define a
    national cuisine.

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  • Food and the nation are so commingled in popular
    discourses that it is often difficult not to
    think one through the other.

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  • To imagine a Japan without ramen almost borders
    on heresy.
  • Ramen is so Japanese.
  • from Barak Kushners interview

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How to eat ramen
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?v6WrkdTrrwew

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  • Like a language, food articulates notion of
    inclusion and exclusion, of national pride and
    xenophobia, on our tables and in our lunchboxes.
  • The history of any nations diet is the history
    of the nation itself, with food fashions, fads
    and fancies mapping episodes of colonialism and
    migration, trade and exploration, cultural
    exchange and boundary-making.

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  • And yet here begins one of the fundamental
    contradictions of the food-nationalism equation
    there is no essential national food.
  • The food which we think of as characterizing a
    particular place always tells stories of movement
    and mixing.

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  • What appear to be indigenous foodways may
    actually be cultural imports, like the café,
    whose French cultural identity is relatively
    recent, having been imported in the seventeenth
    century.

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Ramen
  • Ramen entered the Japanese market as an
    inexpensive, accessible, low-class food for
    itinerant peddlers and poor students in the early
    twentieth century.

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  • The number of chinese students living in Japan
    was significant, one of the largest foreign
    groups by far.
  • From 1896 to just before 1938, approximately
    fifty thousand Chinese students in some form or
    other studied in Japan, greatly influencing lower
    and middle class restaurant offerings in most
    urban areas.

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  • Chinese emigrated to Japan to work. However,
    after losing to Japan in the Sino-Japanese War in
    1895, they came in increasing numbers to study
    how Japan modernized so quickly and surpassed
    China.
  • Students as well as laborers flocked to the new
    communities in Yokohama, parts of Tokyo, Kyushu,
    Kobe, and Sapporo in the north.

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  • Ramen tells an historical story different from
    our stereotyped assumptions of Japanese cuisine
    and its interaction with foreign communities.

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  • The Japanese of the early Taisho era (1912-26)
    considered Chinese cuisine backward. Not until
    after World War Two did Chinese cuisine gain
    recognition as something worthy.

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Instant ramen
  • Instant ramen were created in 1958 by Japans
    Nissin Foods.

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  • Momofuki Ando, who died in Ikeda, near Osaka at
    96, was looking for cheap, decent food for the
    working class when he invented ramen noodles in
    1958. His product fried, dried and sold in
    little plastic wrapped bricks or foam cups
    turned the company he founded, Nissin Foods, into
    a global giant.

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  • Ironically, Japans food industry initially
    rejected the product as a novelty with no future.
  • Instant ramen representing Made in Japan, are
    now not only a national food but a global food.

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  • Now sells more than 65 billion bowls every year
    (as of 2008)
  • more people around the world eat ramen in some
    form on a daily basis than any other foodstuff.

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  • In 2000, the Fuji Research Institute had survey
    of what the Japanese see as their best exports
    and their best invention of the 20th century.
  • Instant ramen
  • Karaoke
  • Walkman
  • Nintendo
  • Compact discs
  • Compact cameras
  • Akira Kurosawa
  • Pokemon

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  • Okuyama Tadamasa claims that the proliferation of
    ramen franchises in Japan and its spread from the
    Far East into the rest of the world demonstrate
    the end of western dominance over national
    cuisines.

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  • Taiwan, according to statistics from the
    International Ramen Manufacturers Association, is
    the worlds 12th largest instant noodle market,
    worth an annual US300 million. This translates
    into an annual total of 900 million packs, or 40
    per person. (2007)

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  • South Koreans consume the greatest amount of
    instant noodles, 69 per capita per year.

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Economic indicator
  • In Thailand, the dominant Mama noodles brad has
    spawned the Mama Noodles index, which
    accurately forecast a weakening of the economy in
    2005.

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  • The 2 million inmates in U.S. prisons would be
    responsible for about 10 of the nations 4.2
    billion instant-noodles sales (November 4th 2008,
    MSN)
  • What inmates once priced in cigarettes they now
    trade for noodles.

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  • College students

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Popularity of ramen
  • The end of Western dominance?
  • Clash of civilization ?
  • or, constant symbiotic synthesis?

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  • Okuyamas thesis posits a happy and peaceful
    co-existence of cultures leading to tasty treats
    in the next century in contrast to the more
    pessimistic view of Huntington.

37
Claude Levi-Strauss
  • Food is not only good to eat, but also good to
    think with.

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Mary Douglas
  • If food is treated as a code, the messages it
    encodes will be found in the pattern of social
    relations being expressed. The message is about
    different degrees of hierarchy, inclusion and
    exclusion, boundaries and transactions across the
    boundaries.

39
Metamorphoses of ramen
  1. Immigrant food
  2. Urban laborer
  3. An antidote for postwar starvation
  4. New taste of convenience and speed
  5. Elite dish (not-instant, traditional kind has
    become hip)

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Glocalization
  • A term that was invented in order to emphasize
    that the globalization of a product is more
    likely to succeed when the product or service is
    adapted specifically to each locality or culture
    it is marketed in. The term combines the word
    globalization with localization.

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Fast Food
  • McDonald
  • Ekiban
  • Yumcha
  • Thai street food

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Fast Food Nation The Dark Side of the
All-American Meal
  • Pull open the glass door, feel the rush of cool
    air, walk in, get on line, study the backlit
    color photographs above the counter, place your
    order, hand over a few dollars, watch teenagers
    in uniforms pushing various buttons, and moments
    later take hold of a plastic tray full of food
    wrapped in colored paper and cardboard. The whole
    experience of buying fast food has become so
    routine, so thoroughly unexceptional and mundane,
    that it is now taken for granted, like brushing
    your teeth or stopping for a red light. It has
    become a social custom as American as a small,
    rectangular, hand-held, frozen, and reheated
    apple pie. (Eric Schlosser, 2001 4)

44
Savor Slowly Ekiben The Fast Food of High
Speed Japan
  • Ekiben railroad station box-lunches
  • These lunches consists of small boxes containing
    a variety of food items, all part of traditional
    Japanese cuisine, sold in railroad stations and
    trains all over the country.

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Yumcha
  • Yumcha as a form of food consumption can best be
    understood in contrast to a meal. A meal is
    considered to be proper, official, elaborate it
    involves a fixed schedule with dishes served
    according to an established program, and it
    always includes a staple such as rice.

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  • Yumcha is considered to be casual and unofficial,
    and staples are not necessarily involved. Whereas
    meals are served by someone such as a waiter,
    yumcha involves more self-help behavior.

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Not From Scratch Thai Food Systems and Public
Eating
  • Women can be seen stopping at a food shop in the
    evenings on their way home from work to pick up
    dinner for the family, main courses are placed in
    small plastic bags with rice being prepared
    easily at home in a rice cooker... For typically
    middle-class Bangkokians particularly women who
    tend to be impeccably dressed frequently cool,
    comfortable establishments is the most desirable
    option. The urban masses are, for the most part,
    of humble economic means and purchase food on the
    streets and from vendors both mobile and
    stationary, and small food-shops specializing in
    noodles, curried dishes or other fare.

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  • If our identities became homeless, exile,
    migrant, nomadic, displaced, and permanent
    stranger-like, how can we talk about the
    connection between what we eat and who we are?

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  • We conceive of our age as existing beyond the
    normal frames of time and space. Time flies, and
    yet each instant is crammed with things to do.
    Time-saving devices create more time but also
    require us to save more of it. Vast distances
    are crossed in no time at all, and yet we seem to
    spend all of our time either going from place to
    place or watching the world go by. There is no
    time to do nothing and no place to do it because
    doing nothing seems too much like doing something
    else. (Siebers, 1994 1)
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