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Preparing the Modern Meal: Urban Capitalism and Working-Class Food in Kenya's Port City [Kietas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Hardback, 277 pages, aukštis x plotis: 229x152 mm, weight: 426 g, 2 maps; 10 images
  • Serija: New African Histories
  • Išleidimo metai: 31-May-2025
  • Leidėjas: Ohio University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0821426222
  • ISBN-13: 9780821426227
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 277 pages, aukštis x plotis: 229x152 mm, weight: 426 g, 2 maps; 10 images
  • Serija: New African Histories
  • Išleidimo metai: 31-May-2025
  • Leidėjas: Ohio University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0821426222
  • ISBN-13: 9780821426227
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
"A case study on how twentieth-century urban capitalism created a new food system for Mombasa's working class. In the early twentieth century, East Africans lived primarily in rural areas, cultivating most of the food they consumed. By the start of the twenty-first century, though, millions of people lived in cities, where they purchased their food from markets and eateries. This transformation reflects broader historical shifts in food production, preparation, and consumption throughout the world from arural subsistence model to a commercial system. Preparing the Modern Meal explores this economic revolution in Mombasa, Kenya, and examines the experiences of those who migrated from rural settings to an Indian Ocean town where they became dependent on the capitalist market for their daily meals. The change to a commercial food system reshaped the culinary culture of East Africa. In rural communities, diets were diverse and varied with the seasons. Conversely, Mombasa's commercial supply chains, which steadily delivered staples like maize meal, wheat flour, tea, and meat, led to a more uniform urban cuisine that remained consistent throughout the year. Urbanization also altered gender roles in cooking. In rural households women prepared the food, but in Mombasa many workers lived in all-male housing and had to cook for themselves. Some even took up cooking as a profession, thus expanding the role of men in the culinary domain. In addition to these themes, Preparing the Modern Meal reviews the emergence of new businesses, particularly those of street food vendors who provided affordable meals in residential neighborhoods and to nearby workplaces. However, these makeshift eateries often clashed with the vision for commerce in a modern city held by municipal officials, who often sought to eliminate these businesses through fines, arrests, and demolition campaigns. Through the lens of food, this book explores the conflicts between elite ideas about urban modernity and the actual ways that poor communities made their lives work in an unequal city"-- Provided by publisher.

A case study on how twentieth-century urban capitalism created a new food system for Mombasa’s working class. In the early twentieth century, East Africans lived primarily in rural areas, cultivating most of the food they consumed. By the start of the twenty-first century, though, millions of people lived in cities, where they purchased their food from markets and eateries. This transformation reflects broader historical shifts in food production, preparation, and consumption throughout the world from a rural subsistence model to a commercial system. Preparing the Modern Meal explores this economic revolution in Mombasa, Kenya, and examines the experiences of those who migrated from rural settings to an Indian Ocean town where they became dependent on the capitalist market for their daily meals. The change to a commercial food system reshaped the culinary culture of East Africa. In rural communities, diets were diverse and varied with the seasons. Conversely, Mombasa’s commercial supply chains, which steadily delivered staples like maize meal, wheat flour, tea, and meat, led to a more uniform urban cuisine that remained consistent throughout the year. Urbanization also altered gender roles in cooking. In rural households women prepared the food, but in Mombasa many workers lived in all-male housing and had to cook for themselves. Some even took up cooking as a profession, thus expanding the role of men in the culinary domain. In addition to these themes, Preparing the Modern Meal reviews the emergence of new businesses, particularly those of street food vendors who provided affordable meals in residential neighborhoods and to nearby workplaces. However, these makeshift eateries often clashed with the vision for commerce in a modern city held by municipal officials, who often sought to eliminate these businesses through fines, arrests, and demolition campaigns. Through the lens of food, this book explores the conflicts between elite ideas about urban modernity and the actual ways that poor communities made their lives work in an unequal city.



This book explores how twentieth-century urban capitalism created a new food system in East Africa’s most important port city: Mombasa, Kenya. Inside households, the dynamics of urban life changed the gendered structures of cooking, while new businesses emerged to sell food to working-class communities that now had to rely on cash to acquire their daily sustenance.

Recenzijos

This beautifully written book is a marvelous addition to studies of the working classes in the Global South. It will change the way you think about capitalism, regional migration, food systems, and urban life. The book has stamina, and Devin Smarts patient and subtle analysis makes it glow. (Kenda Mutongi, author of Matatu: A History of Popular Transportation in Nairobi)

Daugiau informacijos

A case study on how twentieth-century urban capitalism created a new food system for Mombasas working class.
Devin Smart is an assistant professor of history at West Virginia University, where he teaches courses in African, European, and global history. His most recent articles have appeared in the Journal of African History and International Labor and Working-Class History, and his current research projects examine Kenya's commercial fisheries as well as the energy transition that occurred in twentieth-century East Africa.