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Watching What We Eat Kathleen Collins

Watching What We Eat By Kathleen Collins

Watching What We Eat by Kathleen Collins


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Summary

While variety shows, Westerns, and live, scripted dramas have gone the way of rabbit ear antennae, cooking shows are still being watched, often on high definition plasma screens via Tivo. This title illuminates how cooking shows have both reflected and shaped significant changes in American culture.

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Watching What We Eat Summary

Watching What We Eat: The Evolution of Television Cooking Shows by Kathleen Collins

Since the first boxy black-and-white TV sets began to appear in American living rooms in the late 1940s, we have been watching people chop, saute, fillet, whisk, flip, pour, arrange and serve food on the small screen. More than just a how-to or an amusement, cooking shows are also a unique social barometer. Their legacy corresponds to the transition from women at home to women at work, from eight-hour to 24/7 workdays, from cooking as domestic labor to enjoyable leisure, and from clearly defined to more fluid gender roles. While variety shows, Westerns, and live, scripted dramas have gone the way of rabbit ear antennae, cooking shows are still being watched, often on high definition plasma screens via Tivo. "Watching What We Eat: The Evolution of Television Cooking Shows" illuminates how cooking shows have both reflected and shaped significant changes in American culture and will explore why it is that just about everybody still finds them irresistible.

Watching What We Eat Reviews

"Collins, a college librarian with a lifelong love of cooking shows, gives a decade-by-decade breakdown of the evolution of TV cooking... Her thorough research is spiced with anecdotes and personal testimonials from chefs, historians and foodies about the world of TV cooking and the eccentric personalities that populate it." - TIME Magazine"

About Kathleen Collins

Kathleen Collins is an experienced author and researcher who has studied and written about television, media history, popular culture and food. Her work has appeared in the magazines Working Woman and Bitch: Feminist Response to Pop Culture and in the anthology Secrets & Confidences: The Complicated Truth About Women's Friendships (Seal Press: 2004). She has also written encyclopaedia entries on a variety of media history topics. She has a Master's degree in journalism with a specialization in cultural reporting and criticism from New York University and a Master's degree in library science from Long Island University. For the past ten years, she has worked as an editorial researcher for a variety of publications including Glamour and Ladies' Home Journal. She is now a librarian and lives in Manhattan.

Table of Contents

Introduction; Early Period (1945-1962); Chapter One: Stirrings: Radio, Home Economists and James Beard; Chapter Two: La Cuisine and Canned Soup: Dione Lucas vs.; Convenience; Middle Period (1963-1992); Chapter Three: Julia Child and Revolution in the Kitchen; Chapter Four: The Me Decade and the Galloping Gourmet; Chapter Five: Cultural Capital and the Frugal Gourmet; Modern Period (1993-present); Chapter Six: A Network of Its Own; Chapter Seven: Good Television; Chapter Eight: "Democratainment": Gender, Class and the Rachael-Martha Continuum; Chapter Nine: Evolution: How Did We Get Here and What's On Next?

Additional information

CIN1441103198G
9781441103192
1441103198
Watching What We Eat: The Evolution of Television Cooking Shows by Kathleen Collins
Used - Good
Paperback
Continuum Publishing Corporation
2010-07-08
240
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - Watching What We Eat