Abstract
This chapter argues for the place of food studies in tertiary language studies programs. With a myriad of changes to education throughout the twentieth century, language study lost its eminent position as a gateway to higher learning, which means we are required to articulate our relevance to students and university governance. Food and food culture have great appeal amongst students and carving out a place for food studies in our language curricula allows us to generate a new interest amongst a changed student cohort. As well as providing students with an enriching way of learning about other cultures, the non-canonical and universal phenomenon of food or food discourse has the advantage of being immediately accessible to our students who all have their own experiences of food. The study of food also provides us with an opportunity to enhance students’ intercultural skills, which have increasing value in the global workplace. Understanding the multiple layers of meaning attached to food and food culture helps students to develop a sensitivity to the importance of the everyday in their interactions with other cultures. We will discuss this synergy between languages and food studies in the context of tertiary language studies in Spanish and Italian, detailing some of the initiatives in this area.
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- 1.
There are multiple interpretations of the language of food, from the purely linguistic, to the idiolects that cultures/families/people use to talk about food.
- 2.
Food and culture are not “two different realities, separate or even opposite, but of a single reality: food is culture” (own translation).
- 3.
“investigations of an officially scientific nature” (own translation).
- 4.
There are no cultural electives dedicated entirely to food in the Asian Institute at the University of Melbourne. However such subjects do exist in North America. One Asian Studies program at the University of Hawai’i offers a subject entitled “Food, Politics and Culture in Asia”.
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Absalom, M., Anderson, L. (2020). The Language of Food: Carving out a Place for Food Studies in Language Curricula. In: Fornasiero, J., Reed, S.M.A., Amery, R., Bouvet, E., Enomoto, K., Xu, H.L. (eds) Intersections in Language Planning and Policy. Language Policy, vol 23. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-50925-5_23
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