This fascinating history explores the dynamic relationship between overseas colonisation and the bodily experience of eating. It reveals the importance of food to the colonial project in Spanish America and reconceptualises the role of European colonial expansion in shaping the emergence of ideas of race during the Age of Discovery. Rebecca Earle shows that anxieties about food were fundamental to Spanish understandings of the new environment they inhabited and their interactions with the native populations of the New World. Settlers wondered whether Europeans could eat New World food, whether Indians could eat European food and what would happen to each if they did. By taking seriously their ideas about food we gain a richer understanding of how settlers understood the physical experience of colonialism and of how they thought about one of the central features of the colonial project. The result is simultaneously a history of food, colonialism and race.
Author(s): Rebecca Earle
Series: Critical Perspectives on Empire
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Year: 2012
Language: English
Pages: XII+266
List of figures viii
Acknowledgements x
Introduction: Food and the colonial experience 1
1. Humoralism and the colonial body 19
2. Protecting the European body 54
3. Providential fertility 84
4. 'Maize, which is their wheat' 118
5. 'You will become like them if you eat their food' 156
6. Mutable bodies in Spain and the Indies 187
Epilogue 217
Bibliography 220
Index 255