CUISINE AS A MARKER OF CULTURAL IDENTITY. A HERMENEUTIC LOOK AT “INDIAN CUISINEâ€, A SHORT STORY BY TRINIDADIAN-CANADIAN WRITER RAMABAI ESPINET
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.19044/esj.2014.v10n10p%25pAbstract
When it comes to cultural identity, cuisine is generally overlooked or relegated. Emphasis is rather made on history, religion or language (the so-called deep structure of a culture). Notwithstanding, one´s vernacular cuisine outlives one´s vernacular language in generations of immigrants. No matter how much it changes as compared to the original food of their homeland, immigrants and their descendants “keep cooking and eating some version of the family´s ‘mother cuisine’ â€. Immigrants’ cultural identity is embodied in what has been called “ethnic foodâ€, which is in turn caused by several factors. The author of this paper examines cuisine as a marker of cultural identity and, for that purpose, he gives a hermeneutic look at the short story “Indian Cuisineâ€, by adhering to Daniel Chandler´s typology of codes.Downloads
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Published
2014-05-20
How to Cite
Borrero, M. V. R. (2014). CUISINE AS A MARKER OF CULTURAL IDENTITY. A HERMENEUTIC LOOK AT “INDIAN CUISINEâ€, A SHORT STORY BY TRINIDADIAN-CANADIAN WRITER RAMABAI ESPINET. European Scientific Journal, ESJ, 10(10). https://doi.org/10.19044/esj.2014.v10n10p%p
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.