What is it about?
This article uses oral histories to examine how migration affected the gender dynamics of foodwork carried out by late post-war Italian immigrants in Toronto. Culinary gender roles remained preserved as narrators journeyed to Toronto. However, by the twenty-first century when national discourse emphasized a multicultural Canada—the climax of the shift toward culinary pluralism—the narrators each embodied a range of food masculinities and femininities. They also described other motives to do partake in culinary labor that cannot be categorized by the traditional binary. A new paradigm that accounts for the experiences of migrants encountering the homogenizing forces of multiculturalism is needed.
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This page is a summary of: The Culinary Gender Binary in an Era of Multiculturalism, Journal of Family History, July 2018, SAGE Publications,
DOI: 10.1177/0363199018787561.
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