Eating Otherwise
This book explores the philosophical implications of the popular adage that 'you are what you eat' through twentieth-century literature. It investigates the connections between the alimentary and the ontological: between what or how one eats and what one is. Maria Christou's focus is on two influential modernist figures, Georges Bataille and Samuel Beckett; and two influential postmodernist figures, Paul Auster and Margaret Atwood. She aims to theorize the relationship between modernism and postmodernism from a specifically alimentary perspective. By examining the work of these major twentieth-century authors, this book focuses on strange or unusual acts of eating - 'eating' otherwise - as a means to ways of 'being' otherwise. What can eating tell us about being, about who we are and about our being in the world? This powerful, innovative study takes literary food studies in a new direction.
- Takes literary food studies in new directions
- Theorizes the relationship between modernism and postmodernism and engages with philosophy from an alimentary perspective
- Provides original readings of four influential twentieth-century authors: Samuel Beckett, Georges Bataille, Paul Auster, and Margaret Atwood
Product details
October 2017Adobe eBook Reader
9781108271561
0 pages
3 b/w illus.
This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
Table of Contents
- Introduction, you are what you eat: thinking food otherwise
- 1. George Bataille's pornographic food
- 2. Samuel Beckett's alimentary Cogito
- 3. Food, the fall, and the detective: the case of Paul Auster
- 4. Food in Margaret Atwood's dystopias
- Conclusion, modernism, postmodernism, and the otherwise of eating.