Nationality of food: cultural politics on the UNESCO list of intangible cultural heritages and food museums
Hwang, Eunju and Park, Jin Suk (2023) Nationality of food: cultural politics on the UNESCO list of intangible cultural heritages and food museums. Telos (202). pp. 21-41. ISSN 0090-6514 (In Press)
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Does food have a nationality? What if several countries share a similar food culture, and which country can claim the food as its own? This research explores how cultural items such as food belong to particular nations when they are shared by several countries and why nations claim a certain type of culture as theirs.
Just as many European nations in the nineteenth century, East Asian countries claim and appropriate cultural items as their own, and this phenomenon of cultural appropriation often causes national disputes as the origins of the cultures are not known due to their entangled history, geographical proximity and even climate similarity. This research examines narratives of belonging found in the active promotion of food culture exemplified through entities such as the UNESCO List of Intangible Cultural Heritage and food museums. To answer how countries claim culture as theirs, Hobsbawm and Ranger’s invention of tradition and Foucault’s system of exclusion will be applied to the current trend of cultural appropriation.
The study also explores why countries appropriate food culture. Often it is a necessary step for modernizing nations to invent cultural traditions because it provides viable solutions to internal problems which are created in the process of modernization. National culture provides a sense of national identity and unity, confirms the legitimacy of the government, and even annihilates a sense of historical responsibility; reasons which are often required in East Asian nations due to rampant colonization, political crimes under dictatorships or otherwise non-democratic nations, and the reality of being a relatively newly developed or developing nation state. Therefore, emerging countries which newly gained economic power often benefit from food disputes.
While probing how and why nations appropriate culture, it is demonstrated how the UNESCO List of Intangible Cultural Heritage and food museums attempt to cease controversial debate on the origin. The authenticity of these institutions convinces people to misbelieve that recently invented culture is old or an authentic tradition, therefore, to believe that food belongs to a certain nation.
Spring 2023 issue.
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