In this innovative study, Dr. Gray builds a compelling case for understanding culinary fiction and memoirs as participating in diplomacy. As she brings familiar authors and chefs into conversation with lesser known culinary voices, Gray highlights how writing about food facilitates connections across temporal, spatial, and cultural divides. Her insights about culinary diplomacy traverse disciplinary borders resulting in an engaging work with wide appeal to audiences interested in food studies, women's and gender studies, and contemporary global literature.--Laura White, professor of English, Middle Tennessee State University Jennifer Gray so generously serves up a tasty meal, full of flavors and aromas of Middle Eastern dishes (stuffed grape leaves, lamb stew, yoghurt sauce, Moroccan couscous, baklava) prepared by female characters in a wide range of novels and memoirs, some which even contain recipes. Tehran, L.A., and villages in Ireland and France become sites of citizen culinary diplomacy displaying a variety of experiences involving migration, transcultural interaction, travel, food, and the Middle East.
Gray's point is clear, compelling, and timely: Hospitality and cuisine can break through barriers between cultures, religion, and language, particularly barriers between Muslims and their neighbors. Eat up and enjoy the banquet!--Allen Hibbard, Middle Tennessee State University Reading and rereading two culinary novels by my daughter, Marsha, has always given me the joy and happiness she had expected her books bring to her readers. But reading the critical and insightful literary analysis by Dr. Jennifer Gray bestowed me with an in-depth comprehension of how Marsha's writings function as a means for better understanding of different cultures and cultural differences, and how Marsha has consciously and cleverly, combined meaningful words, metaphors, and imagery to create literary artworks that give readers a true pleasure of reading as well as an understanding and appreciating of our humanity.--Abbas Mehran, Marsha Mehran's father Relying on and expanding Chapple-Sokol's concept of Citizen Culinary Diplomacy, the book brings forth a unique understanding of food and identity in the twenty-first century in order to allow further discussions on the importance of transcultural culinary ties in an increasingly globalized world. Dr. Gray navigates between fiction, memoirs, and autobiographies to add on this nascent area of study within major postcolonial theories.--Lava Asaad, Auburn University We have always looked at food and food recipes in works of fiction as a way of preserving cultures or an attempt at reaffirming a connection with the distant homeland for a diasporic writer living in the third space.
Dr. Gray rather considers food in diaspora fiction as a culinary bridge and a negotiation for peace between the diasporic culture and the host land in its purest and most pleasant and humanistic yet powerful form.--Lama Al-harbi, assistant professor of English, King Saud University.