Culinary Citizenship: Ethnic Food, Racial Agency, and Cultural Politics in Neoliberal Times

Seed Grant Semester Awarded
Spring
Seed Grant Award Year
2015

Building on recent work on the agency of matter and things by neo-materialist theorists such as Jane Bennett and Sara Ahmed, this project investigates the ways in which the cultural object of ethnic food can be understood as playing a crucial role in aiding U.S. immigrants’ informal but de facto acquisition of democratic citizenship. Such a nonstandard way of claiming citizenship is achieved not through conventional juridical-political channels, but through the everyday practices of immigrant entrepreneurship, racialized labor, and ethnic consumption in the culinary production of ethnic food. I call this ensemble “culinary citizenship,” suggesting an improvisational but de facto citizen-making. Combining theoretical analysis with ethnographic fieldwork, this project uses a triangulated framework of entrepreneurship-labor-consumerism to examine alternative formations of citizenship in the global food economy, with the aim to open new intellectual horizons of agency, governance, and social change.

Principal Investigator(s)
Charles T. Lee, Assistant Professor, Justice and Social Inquiry, School of Social Transformation