Description |
223 pages ; 24 cm |
Contents |
Introduction: From Giant to Beggar: the Colossus and the Man of Naught -- 1. The Devil's Carnival -- 2. Charlatans, Cheats and Malingerers -- 3. The Science of the Belly: Decline and Death of the Myth of Cockaigne -- 4. The Land of Hunger -- 5. The Witches' Carnival -- 6. A Blemished World |
Summary |
In this highly original book, Camporesi explores the two worlds of feast and famine in early modern Europe. Camporesi brings together a mosaic of images from Italian folklore: phantasmagoric processions of giants, pigs, vagabonds, down-trodden rogues, charlatans and beggars in rags. He reconstructs a world inhabited by the strange forces of peasant culture, and describes the various rituals - carnivals, festivities, competitions and funerals - in which food played a central role. Camporesi's description alternates between the lives of the 'haves' and the 'have-nots'. He moves from the starving underworld of 'criminalized poverty', where people were forced to develop the art of living at the expense of others simply in order to survive, to the gastronomic culture of the well-fed, with their excessive eating habits, oily foods and colourful table manners |
Analysis |
Italy |
|
Literature Special subjects Food History |
Notes |
Includes index |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references (pages [189]-220) and index |
Notes |
Orig. pub. in Italian |
Subject |
Folklore in literature.
|
|
Food in literature.
|
|
Gastronomy in literature.
|
|
Hunger in literature.
|
|
Italian literature -- History and criticism.
|
LC no. |
95025530 |
ISBN |
0745608884 (acid-free paper) |
|