英国早期现代文学与饮食

J. Fitzpatrick
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摘要

关于食物的早期现代文学包括一系列传统上吸引文学评论家的体裁,如戏剧和诗歌,以及那些不太可能被归类为文学但往往具有文学维度的作品,如宗教布道、烹饪书和饮食文学,也被称为养生法。在早期现代文学中,食物通常象征着一种复杂的关系,即身体、自我意识和当时控制食物生产和消费的社会政治结构之间的关系。因此,作者提到食物可能传达了叙事、人物塑造和动机的细节,但也表明了更广泛的社会关注,如妇女的角色、宗教义务、穷人的待遇和外国人的地位。面包等普通主食占了很大比例,但杏和其他难以种植的水果等新进口到英国的外来食品也占了很大比例。还有一种对反常消费的迷恋,比如同类相食(有时是隐喻的,有时是字面上的),它是各种另类模式的象征。早期现代文学中对食物的消费通常以其写作的时期为基础。一种常见的重复现象是,消费模式表明了社会和道德责任,因此,过度饮食或过度享乐被认为是有罪的。同样明显的是,从中世纪的公共用餐和封建义务感以及对陌生人的款待,到日益增长的早期现代的隐私和个人主义意识的转变。食物是民族、宗教和文化身份的复杂标志,某些食物意味着天主教或英国人的身份,而其他食物或它们的制作则意味着陌生感。然而,食物也可以成为解决饥饿、欲望和厌恶等问题的捷径。
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Early Modern Literature and Food in Britain
Early modern literature about food is found in a range of genres that have traditionally appealed to literary critics, such as drama and poetry, as well as writings that can be less neatly categorized as literary but that tend to have a literary dimension, such as religious sermons, cookery books, and dietary literature, also known as regimens. Food in early modern literature often signals a complex relationship between the body, a sense of self, and the sociopolitical structures that regulated food’s production and consumption in the period. Writers mentioning food may thereby convey details of narrative, characterization, and motivation but also signal broader social concerns such as the role of women, religious obligations, treatment of the poor, and the status of foreigners. Ordinary staple foods such as bread feature heavily, but so too do exotic foods newly imported into England such as apricots and other fruits that were hard to grow. There is also a fascination with perverse consumption, such as cannibalism (sometimes metaphorical and sometimes literal), which functions as an indication of various modes of alterity. The consumption of food in early modern literature is often grounded in the period in which it was written. A common recurrence is the way in which patterns of consumption signal social and moral responsibility, so that eating and drinking to excess, or taking too much pleasure in them, is considered sinful. Also evident is the shift from medieval communal dining and a sense of feudal obligation and hospitality to strangers to a growing early modern sense of privacy and individualism. Food functions as a complex marker of national, religious, and cultural identity whereby certain foods signify Catholicism or Englishness and other foods, or their preparation, will signify strangeness. Yet food can also be a shorthand way to address issues such as hunger, desire, and disgust.
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