Seminar Response, Week 3

“‘The mistress of American families, whether they like it or not, have the duties of missionaries imposed upon them by that class from which our supply of domestic servants is drawn.’ in this metamorphic economy the kitchen become and uncivilized space, the women who worked within it unfinished or uncooked, the project of running a home was metonymic of the civilizing work of empire”

Tompkins examines the eighteenth-century hearth and its evolution into the nineteenth-century kitchen. She unpacks the ways in which the hearth became characterized as a household hub for socializing as well as a place of dirtiness and contamination. As the hearth was replaced by cleaner and more efficient cooking technologies, Tompkins inspects attitudes that romanticized the space of the hearth and grieved through the transitional era of household stoves.  She exposes how the kitchen was a divisive space that established gendered domestic responsibilities, as well as class hierarchies and racial duties. The American ideal of gendered domestic roles represents centuries of patriarchal oppression. Tomkins explains how cooking granted women a certain degree of power in society, through turning raw ingredients into sustenance, establishing the labor to be as essential as the food itself. The kitchen simultaneously became a space of citizenship and selfhood, as well as a tool for nation building, imperial expansion, and racialized servitude.

 

“So important were spices, they famously launched Christopher Columbus around the world, as he searched for a route to the Indies on behalf of the Spanish monarchy. And most important for Americans, this spice lust led to the discovery of the New World without which the following chapters about markets in New York and Chicago would be nonexistent.

 

According to Henry Hobhouse: “The starting point for the European expansion out of the Mediterranean and the Atlantic continental shelf had nothing to do with, say, religion or the rise of capitalism but it had a great deal to do with pepper.” (Newman,19-20)

Newman offers an interesting review of the history of commodity spice markets, and how peppercorns have been used as a tool of commerce and their function in society as currency. It is interesting to think that the European “discovery” of America was through the pursuit of more flavorful spices and that the financial market we know today was built through the trading of spices. The colonization of the Americas and spice based financial structuring is evocative of the ways in which kitchens were used as a tool for nation building and imperial expansion, mentioned in my examination of the Tompkins text.

 

“Women-led marches took place in over 600 locations spread across seven continents—including Antarctica. In addition to Washington, massive protests took place in Boston; Chicago; Denver; Los Angeles; Madison, Wisconsin; New York; Oakland; Portland, Oregon; St. Paul; San Francisco and Seattle. According to one count, as many as 4.6 million people took part in the global day of action.”

The fight continues to transform society and gender inequality. Trump threatens the progress that has been made by the women’s rights movements and embodies harmful sexist values that are reminiscent of the misogyny that got us into this mess so many years ago.

 

Works Cited:

“Women’s March on Washington: Historic Protest Three Times Larger Than Trump’s Inaugural Crowd.” Democracy Now! Accessed January 24, 2017. https://www.democracynow.org/2017/1/23/womens_march_millions_take_to_streets.

Newman, Kara. The Secret Financial Life of Food: From Commodities Markets to Super Markets. New York: Columbia University Press, 2013. Print
Tompkins, Kyla W. Racial Indigestion: Eating Bodies in the 19th Century. New York and London: New York University Press, 2012. Print

Home is Where the Hearth is, Tasting Lab week 3

1.Do you think the hearth still has a central role? What will the hearth look like in 2020? Kitchen-talk?

As we modernize and seek out advancements in productivity and efficiency we become increasingly disconnected from the social aspect the hearth offered. I think of two different things when thinking of the “modern day hearth”. Nuber one being the television, being a central place of the home to gather and seek out stimulating content. The other being possibly more place specific to the pacific northwest, or even more specifically the homes of millennial students in the PNW, is the bong. Often being a place to gather around a flame and the ingestion of smoke which often provokes thoughtful connections through conversation, laughter, snacking and sometimes becoming a zombie and binge-watching an entire season of Grey’s Anatomy in a week.

 

2. Which spices did you blend? Why?

Cardamom, Cumin, Hungarian Paprika, Clove, Vanilla.

These spices work well together, creating a warming effect with a pleasant aroma.

 

Header Image source: http://heckasac.blogspot.com/2011/04/brussels-and-houffalize.html

Internship Planning, Week 1

  Goal Setting 

1.      Fundraising 101 (Specifically Strategies for Fundraising)

2.      Event Planning Components 101 (Life of an Event)

§  Planning needs vary based on scopes (let’s consider a variety of differently scaled events)

§  Seating Plans/Charts (Logistics, Considerations/Preparation/Last Minute SOS)

–       Strategies for Fundraising Events/General Events

§  Specifically:

Ø  Goal Setting

Ø  Marketing/Communications

Ø  Audience

Ø  Fundraising Needs

Ø  Etc.

–      Strengths

§  Food/Beverage

§  Creative Thinking

§  Problem Solving

§  Working under pressure

–       What do I consider my weaknesses?

§  Would like to strengthen networking skills 

§  Event Proposals (Execution Plans)

§  Interpersonal communication

§  Introduction to Shai’Anne Luebbe, Special Events Assistant

§  Special Events Briefing (Details about current rotation)

–       Capitol Land Trust Breakfast (Tuesday, February 7th, 7-8:30am) Correan to CLT contact for RSVP & send events details.

–       State of the College Address (Wednesday, February 15th, 1pm)

§  Shai’Anne to lead logistics w/Correan overseeing. *Shai’Anne will not be in the office of the event and Correan + Archer will handle execution

§  Will need to looped in on planning progression

–       The Art of Giving Gala & Auction (Saturday, March 4th, All Day)

–       Evergreen at 50: Founding Day (Tuesday, March 21st, Afternoon/Early Evening)

–       Years of Service Brunch (Wednesday, June 14th, 11am) *Work on this will begin early next month

§  Professional Development Assignments

–       Event Planning Scenarios (Also collaboration with Shai’Anne)

§  Next Steps

–       Background check clearance

What Does Vanilla Sex Taste Like & Do Leather Daddies Eat Meat?

“Eating is often a site of erotic pleasure itself, what I call, as a means of signaling the alignment between oral pleasure and other forms of nonnormative desire, queer alimentary… the mouth and the genitals function as coeval sites of erotic intensity… both can be overstimulated, and indeed sensual indulgence at one of those sites inevitably drives the appetitive needs of the other.” (Tompkins, 5)

These words grabbed my attention immediately and provoked an investigation of how the site of the mouth evokes pleasure as well as being a site of queer nourishment. When queer theory enters the conversation, the discussion often revolves around sexuality. When eating is sexualized, the body becomes a material manifestation of the shifting dynamics of class, gender, race, and sexuality. Tompkins argues that what we ingest, where we ingest, and how we ingest informs our identities. With this knowledge, eating then has the ability to challenge how we think about queer identity formations. The term “eating someone out” fetishizes the act of eating genitalia. We classify more innocent sexual acts as being “vanilla”.  If eating creates who we become, then gustatory motifs perpetuate dominant narratives and social constructs. Alimentary and the sexual have fused to eroticize consumption and shifts between the lines of identity.

“In The Omnivore’s Dilemma, writer and activist Michael Pollan describes food commodities as “an economic abstraction,” … instead of buying or selling a particular bushel of corn, traders buy or sell a bushel of corn that meets certain grading standards. Those standards might specify some combination of size, moisture content, level of insect or other damage exhibited, color, or origin. But within those standards, commodities are “without qualities; quantity is the only thing that matters.” (Newman, 11)

This particular passage struck me because it highlights how food commodification does not place a price based on how delicious a product is but valuing large quantity that meets specific standards that do not reflect flavor. I feel there is a major disconnect between how our food is produced, and the quest for quality food that is tasty. Safeway may sell organic carrots, but how can we be reassured that the carrots we throw into our grocery cart will taste sweet with a great crunch? Will they taste soapy and make you wish you had picked out some mouthwash? Can the mass production of agricultural goods ever bring  the consumer fresh produce that is at the height of flavor? How can we advocate for quality food that factors in flavor? What price are we willing to pay for the satisfaction of something pure that tastes exquisite?

News Media:

Looking for healthy fast food? Try Taco Bell

“Taco Bell, the home of a Doritos-wrapped taco, could actually help you keep your New Year’s resolution to eat healthier when you dine out this year.The fast-food chain has made a series of changes over the years, from eliminating artificial flavors and trans fat to the low-calorie ‘Fresco” menu and reducing sodium across the menu by 15% since 2008.”

Taco Bell has found a way to market themselves to consumers who are in search of healthier food options, but willing to sacrifice quality for the sake of convenience and affordability.

 

Works Cited:

“Looking for Healthy Fast Food? Try Taco Bell.” USA TODAY. Accessed January 18, 2017. http://www.usatoday.com/story/money/nation-now/2017/01/05/taco-bell-may-healthiest-fast-food-option-out-there-doritos-taco/96204454/.

Newman, Kara. The Secret Financial Life of Food: From Commodities Markets to Super Markets. New York: Columbia University Press, 2013. Print
Tompkins, Kyla W. Racial Indigestion: Eating Bodies in the 19th Century. New York and London: New York University Press, 2012. Print

Tasting Lab Week: An eggcellent start to the quarter!

 

Golden Egg Pink Egg Marbled Egg White egg Salmon Roe
Appearance:Buttery yellow, ting of gray, bleak Appearance:Festive, bright pink, cartoony Appearance:Pretty gnarly Appearance:Typical Appearance:salmony pink, look like glass marbles
Taste:Not exceptionally flavorful

 

Taste:Pickled beets, colors and reminiscent of an Easter Egg, connotations liked to family, celebration, and Jesus

 

Taste: Savory and salty

Sakuma Farms, praised for being local but carrying a “problematic history” of exploitation

 

Taste:Eggactly as eggspeceted exactly Taste:Salty fishy gusher
“Exotic” “Extravagant” “High class”

 

 

 

Header Image source: https://happyeasterimageswishes2016.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/Funny-Egg-HD-Wallpapers-5.jpg