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COMMODIFYING AND GENDERING FOOD IN FILMS AND TELEVISION Prepared by: Mariam Bedraoui and Rachid Elaasri
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Commodifying and Gendering Food in Films and Television

Feb 25, 2016

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Commodifying and Gendering Food in Films and Television. Prepared by: Mariam Bedraoui and Rachid Elaasri. Core Material. “ Slow Food, slow Films” Author: Dennis Rothermel Source: Quarterly Review of Film and Video, Issue 4, July 2009. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Commodifying and Gendering Food in Films and Television

COMMODIFYING AND GENDERING FOOD IN FILMS AND TELEVISION

Prepared by: Mariam Bedraouiand Rachid Elaasri

Page 2: Commodifying and Gendering Food in Films and Television

Core Material

“Slow Food, slow Films” Author: Dennis Rothermel Source: Quarterly Review of Film

and Video, Issue 4, July 2009.

“A Domestic Divo: Televised Treatments of Masculinity, Femininity and Food” by

Author: Rebecca Swenson Source: Critical Studies in Media

Communication, Issue 1, March 2009.

Page 3: Commodifying and Gendering Food in Films and Television

Outline

Part One: Food, Television/Cinema: Zones of Cultural

Intersections Methodological Notes

Part Two: Commodifying Food: “Slow Food, Slow Films” Gendering Food: “A Domestic Divo: Televised

Treatment Of Masculinity, Femininity and Food” Part Three:

An Overall Evaluation

Page 4: Commodifying and Gendering Food in Films and Television

Food, Cinema/ Television: Zones of Cultural Intersections

Page 5: Commodifying and Gendering Food in Films and Television

Some Notes on Methodology

What is food? Food stuff and cooking The space where cooking takes

place The values related to food and

cooking What contexts for food?

Food genre films Cookery shows

How will the articles be discussed?

Page 6: Commodifying and Gendering Food in Films and Television

Commodifying Food in Films

“Slow Food, Slow Film”

Page 7: Commodifying and Gendering Food in Films and Television

“Slow Food, Slow Film”: Main Thesis

The cultural load of food and films

Manipulation and commodification

Resistance to this dominant mainstream productions

Artistic creations

“Food and film inherit traditions with a broad range of values. Large- scale industry proliferation of social pabulum has come to dominate in both. Perennially renewed resistance to this domination, however, thrives in both food culture and film culture. The hallmark in either case is dedication to exquisite creations within the dedicated practice of an art.” P. 265

“What slow films has in common with slow food is the prevailing presence of care, care for the making of food, care for the making of the films, but foremost for the one for whom it is meant, who will in turn will be ready for the receipt of the gift. In stark contrast, industrial food and industrial film find value strictly in terms of the exchange of price for commodity.” P275

Page 8: Commodifying and Gendering Food in Films and Television

“Slow Food, Slow Film”: Key Concepts1- Slow Food

Page 9: Commodifying and Gendering Food in Films and Television

“Slow Food, Slow Film”: Key Concepts2- Slow Film

Page 10: Commodifying and Gendering Food in Films and Television

“Slow Food, Slow Film”: Key Concepts3- Commodification

Page 11: Commodifying and Gendering Food in Films and Television

“Slow Food, Slow Film”: A Review of the Case Study

Page 12: Commodifying and Gendering Food in Films and Television

A Review of the Case Study: An adaptation to Meet Conditioned Tastes

Film making style Long elaborate shots Contemplative protagonists

Food culture Simple dishes using fresh ingredients Cooking is the process of designing a

gift Small servings

Film making style Conventional analytical montage Conventional female protagonists

Food culture Cooking grants power and control Mainstream food: Pizza, overcooked

pasta with tomato sauce Large servings

Page 13: Commodifying and Gendering Food in Films and Television

Evaluation

The use of fast food in a movie is not necessarily a sign of complicity and consolidation of the dominant consumptive habits

Not all Hollywood adaptations are by necessity driven by an intentional marketing for the capitalist values.

The construct of slow food may not keep the same defining boundaries across different cultures.