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Details
Document Type: | Book |
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All Authors / Contributors: |
ALBENA SHKODROVA |
ISBN: | 1350132306 9781350132306 |
OCLC Number: | 1111657420 |
Contents: | Introduction: The Bulgarian Cookbooks SamizdatCh 1. Between Communist Feminism and PatriarchyCh 2. The Practical Value of a ScrapbookCh 3. The Social Powers of Recipes and CookingCh 4. "I Cooked with Pleasure"Conclusion. (To Communist Women) Cooking Made Sense |
Reviews
Publisher Synopsis
It is a valuable book of cultural history. It smells like literature and it tastes like Bulgarian socialism. * Ivan Krastev, Chairman, Centre for Liberal Strategies, Sofia. * From her silence, my mother made wonderful fried zucchini, baked lamb, banitsa... Everything can be said with a few dishes. Only later did I realize why my mother and grandmother were such good cooks. It wasn't cooking, but storytelling. Scrapbooks with personal handwritten recipes are sources of these untold stories. With her inventive research, Albena Shkodrova opens for us these small private time capsules of the recent past. All handwritten recipes passing from woman to woman and generation to generation are pages of a hidden and, as it turns out, subversive history of communist Bulgaria. Without them our knowledge for that time would be tasteless and spiceless. While reading Shkodrova's book, you enter again the kitchen of that past, get invited to its table, and forget to leave. * Georgi Gospodinov, author of The Physics of Sorrow and Time Shelter. * This exploration of the "political nature of food" is about storytelling, social ties and book-making as much as cooking. Who would have imagined that "passionate recipe exchange" could be such a powerful force of resistance? Rebellious Cooks and Recipe Writing in Communist Bulgaria is a wonderfully unexpected and engaging insight into the way we struggle to stay human in the face of an oppression. * Edward Stourton, Writer and Broadcaster at the BBC * [The] book's defence of homegrown recipe collections and their importance as material evidence of Bulgaria's cultural heritage is both cogent and indisputable. * Slavonic & East European Review * Read more...

