Insatiable City: Food and Race in New Orleans

Theresa McCulla
University of Chicago Press

In Insatiable City, Theresa McCulla probes the overt and covert ways that the production of food and the discourse about it both created and reinforced many strains of inequality in New Orleans, a city significantly defined by its foodways.

Tracking the city’s economy from nineteenth-century chattel slavery to twentieth-century tourism, McCulla uses menus, cookbooks, newspapers, postcards, photography, and other material culture to limn the interplay among the production and reception of food, the inscription and reiteration of racial hierarchies, and the constant diminishment and exploitation of working-class people.

The consumption of food and people, she shows, was mutually reinforced and deeply intertwined.

Read more at University of Chicago Press

Previous
Previous

The Second Battle for Africa: Garveyism, the US Heartland, and Global Black Freedom

Next
Next

The Blue Period: Black Writing in the Early Cold War