Opening Up Space: A Lovely Technofeminist Opportunity

Cosmopolitanism, National Identity, and Crossing National Lines

Both in the past and now, food and cooking is intrinsically linked to culture and national identity. In Victorian England, good cooking was considered a sign of civility and class, and international cuisines, especially French and German cuisines, were delighted in. This Women's Recipe Book is certainly a sign of that cosmopolitan sense. As mentioned in the introduction to the text, the recipes in the text come from a variety of cultures, though mostly Western European, and include American, French, and Spanish-style recipes. One recipe marks itself as "African", and is one of the few distinctly non-European entries in the recipe book.

However, the cultural connections to food could be used to draw lines between 'us' and 'them', and this is demonstrated by some of the widely used cooking texts at the time. One of the most famously used cookbooks by a woman at the time was Mrs. Beeton's Book of Household Management, by Isabella Beeton, published in 1861 and in chapter 40, "Dinners and Dining", touched on the topic of race, culture, and cooking in a way that is recognizably racist. She wrote:

"Man, it has been said, is a dining animal. Creatures of the inferior races eat and drink; man only dines. It has also been said that he is a cooking animal; but some races eat food without cooking it. A Croat captain said to M. Brillat Savarin, "When, in campaign, we feel hungry, we knock over the first animal we find, cut off a steak, powder it with salt, put it under the saddle, gallop over it for half a mile, and then eat it." Huntsmen in Dauphiny, when out shooting, have been known to kill a bird, pluck it, salt and pepper it, and cook it by carrying it some time in their caps. It is equally true that some races of men do not dine any more than the tiger or the vulture. It is not a dinner at which sits the aboriginal Australian, who gnaws his bone half bare and then flings it behind to his squaw. And the native of Terra-del-Fuego does not dine when he gets his morsel of red clay. Dining is the privilege of civilization. The rank which a people occupy in the grand scale may be measured by their way of taking their meals, as well as by their way of treating their women. The nation which knows how to dine has learnt the leading lesson of progress. It implies both the will and the skill to reduce to order, and surround with idealisms and graces, the more material conditions of human existence; and wherever that will and that skill exist, life cannot be wholly ignoble."

Isabella Beeton's views on the cultural importance of dining were not uncommon for the era, and her 

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