Altering Cooking and Eating Habits during the Romanian Communist Regime by Using Cookbooks

This digital project examines the role of a cook book, Sanda Marin’s Carte de Bucate, first published in 1936,  as a vehicle for social education in Communist Romania. The book was censored and transformed during the Communist regime as two interconnected phenomena were taking place: the reinforcing...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Encounters in Theory and History of Education Vol. 19; pp. 141 - 162
Main Author: Ghita, Ina Irina
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
French
Spanish
Published: Kingston Queens University 30-11-2018
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Summary:This digital project examines the role of a cook book, Sanda Marin’s Carte de Bucate, first published in 1936,  as a vehicle for social education in Communist Romania. The book was censored and transformed during the Communist regime as two interconnected phenomena were taking place: the reinforcing of the ideology of the Communist model and an increasing economic crisis that led to scarcity of food. The paper also pays attention to how the language and tone used in the book changed depending on the understanding of gender roles in different decades. In spite of Communist claims of an equal division of responsibilities, procuring of food and cooking was considered a woman’s task.   By addressing equal responsibility in the public sphere, not at home, the progress toward gender equity reached after the War was completely erased during communism since women had to work and also be responsible for all domestic duties at home, a situation that has been similar in other eastern European countries to this day.  
ISSN:1494-4936
2560-8371
1925-8992
DOI:10.24908/eoe-ese-rse.v19i0.6752