Reimagining the culinary representations remembrances and resistances in select works of recipe fiction
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St. Joseph s College (Autonomous), Irinjalakuda, University of Calicut
Abstract
Recipe Fiction as a literary genre is shaped by its hybrid format that conjoins elements
of a novel and of a cookbook. This thesis examines four novels that adhere to this
structural hybridity- Like Water for Chocolate by Laura Esquivel, The Kitchen
Daughter: A Novel by Jael McHenry, Pomegranate Soup by Marsha Mehran, and The
Cuttlefish: A Novel by Maryline Desbiolles. The novels, marked by the presence of
food recipes in them, emerge to be multidimensional texts which call for a
performative engagement from the reader. The study seeks the possibilities of reading
Recipe Fiction as women’s life scripts, and reclaiming their muted voices from the
kitchen. It proposes to address the research gap that persists in the domain of Food
Studies, around domestic kitchen spaces and cooking practices. The study
foregrounds the creative, the transformative and the subversive aspects of domestic
culinary practices as they interact with the complex dynamics of memory, agency and
selfhood. Ingenious representations of the domestic kitchen spaces, formative
remembrances of the sensorial, gastronomic encounters, and resistances that impel the
cook towards empowerment and actualisation, shape the way the culinary is
reimagined. The texts are studied for their capacity to challenge constrictive cultural
norms, intimidating personal constraints, and discriminatory historical erasures.
Theoretical postulates are borrowed from feminist geography, gustemology,
infrapolitics, and power feminism to construct a framework for the textual analyses.
The research seeks to reimagine domestic cooking as an empowering act, by
evaluating its dynamic, reinventive and transformative prospects.
