2002
DOI: 10.2307/4129222
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"Eat the World": Postcolonial Encounters in Quebec City’s Ethnic Restaurants

Abstract: This article examines intercultural contact in Quebec City’s ethnic restaurants. The results of this multisited inquiry show that ethnic restaurants have developed rapidly, representing microspaces of intercultural encounter and exchange, places where people can see, touch, and consume the cuisine of the "other." More specifically, this article explores the ways in which eating reduces difference and distance; how it evokes cultural and geographical appropriation. Ethnic restaurants represent deterritorialized… Show more

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Cited by 29 publications
(34 citation statements)
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“…While it is debatable whether Japanese pop culture overseas does or does not further Japanese national interests as the government hopes, the assumption that anime, manga or otaku aesthetics are essentially and originally Japanese often goes unquestioned. Similar assumptions about the link between culture and national/ethnic identity also exist in the field of food in transnational contexts, where ethnic food is often examined as a site for the construction of diasporic identity (Roy 2002, Turgeon and Pastinelli 2002, Thomas 2004, Oum 2005. Our study of sushi offers a different perspective, as it questions the essentialised notion of a national culture, implicitly challenging the idea that the expansion of food cultures is always linked to diasporas.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 80%
“…While it is debatable whether Japanese pop culture overseas does or does not further Japanese national interests as the government hopes, the assumption that anime, manga or otaku aesthetics are essentially and originally Japanese often goes unquestioned. Similar assumptions about the link between culture and national/ethnic identity also exist in the field of food in transnational contexts, where ethnic food is often examined as a site for the construction of diasporic identity (Roy 2002, Turgeon and Pastinelli 2002, Thomas 2004, Oum 2005. Our study of sushi offers a different perspective, as it questions the essentialised notion of a national culture, implicitly challenging the idea that the expansion of food cultures is always linked to diasporas.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 80%
“…Ainsi, pour Cook et Crang (1996), la consommation interculturelle représente non seulement l'appropriation d'une autre culture, mais aussi l'appropriation d'un espace et d'un territoire. Dans une étude sur la consommation dans les restaurants ethniques, Turgeon et Pastinelli (2002) font remarquer que les individus ne s'identifient pas seulement à une culture à partir des nourritures qui lui sont propres, ils peuvent également s'identifier à elle en adoptant sa manière de manger ou même en s'appropriant délibérément la nourriture qu'un groupe rejette de manière explicite (en exprimant des dégoûts). Ainsi, si la nourriture était traditionnellement un élément distinctif des cultures nationales (clams du Massachusetts, pasties du Michigan, crawfish de la Louisiane, sirop d'érable du Québec, etc.…”
Section: « Omnivores » Et « Univores »unclassified
“…For discussing the perspectives we present international studies developed at the intersection between food omnivorism and cultural omnivorism (Cappeliez & Johnston, 2013;Germann Molz, 2007;Jonas, 2013;Turgeon & Pastinelli, 2002;Warde, Martens & Olsen ,1999).…”
Section: Materials and Methodologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The pursuit of variety of consumer experience is a feature of particular social groups and that some specific component practices express social distinction. Turgeon & Pastinelli (2002) understand that, just as the new restaurants of the nineteenth century and their menus that united regional cuisines dishes made possible to know and consume a new idea of national, the twenty-first century ethnic restaurants also help to consolidate a post-colonial world. Ethnic restaurants represent deterritorialized places where diners can get to know other cultures on familiar ground, a microcosm of intercultural exchange.…”
Section: Food Omnivorism As Cosmopolitanism Stancementioning
confidence: 99%
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