The Immigrant Kitchen: Food, Ethnicity, and Diaspora
Half Title Page
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Food in the Immigrant's Domestic Life
Immigration, Naturalization, and the “Crypto-Foreigner
Immigration Legislation
Genre
Methodology and Critical Framework
The Chapters
Chapter 1: From Academic Sojourners to Settler Migrants: “Scholarship Boy” and Girls in the Kitchen
The “Scholarship Boy” as Template for Achievement
The Classroom at the “Centre of the Home”
Testing One’s Culinary “Authenticity”
Chapter 2: Eating in Public as Performance of Assimilation, Diaspora, or Ethnic Belonging
School Lunches: Conflict in the Cafeteria
Double Consciousness and Ethnic Awakening
Reclaiming Diasporic Ties
Heritage Tourism and Celebratory Banquets
Qualified Claim of American Belonging
Chapter 3: Mapping the New South(west)ern Home
Syncretic Southern Foodways in Exile
Miami as the Culinary Capital of the Cuban Diaspora and the “Deep” South
The Borderlands as Sites of Contested Difference within Sameness
Chapter 4: Expats in Love: Recipes for Belonging Abroad
Food Adventurers
Expatriation and “Local” Foodways
Memoirists as Romantic Heroines Who Cook
Tanzania
France
China
Chapter 5: Diasporic Inventions: Reclaiming Family Culinary Traditions
Displacement as Root Cause of Diasporic Practices
Food Writing and Its Performative Functions
Reclaiming Jewish Ritual in a Secular Context
Affirming African Diasporic Connections
Postmodern Reclamations of Invented Family Traditions
Conclusion: Talking Turkey: The Thanksgiving Holiday as the Measure of Assimilation
Immigrant Thanksgiving Celebrations on Film
Immigrants as Human-Interest News Stories during Thanksgiving
Works Cited
Index