Living community cookbook: transdisciplinary collaboration for constructing recipes with biocultural value
This research aims to delve into food knowledge and practices concerning the ecological management of food resources, spanning procurement, transformation, and consumption processes, through the lens of creating a cookbook as a tool for decolonizing food knowledge and practices. The impetus for craf...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Ecology and society 2024-11, Vol.29 (4), Article art12 |
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description | This research aims to delve into food knowledge and practices concerning the ecological management of food resources, spanning procurement, transformation, and consumption processes, through the lens of creating a cookbook as a tool for decolonizing food knowledge and practices. The impetus for crafting a cookbook alongside an indigenous community in northwestern Mexico stems from the dynamic process of exchanging ecological and food knowledge, where the following questions are posed: What foundational knowledge and essential ingredients underlie the community's food system? And how might the cookbook serve as a catalyst for knowledge exchange and transdisciplinary collaboration? Adopting a qualitative approach, the research employs participatory methodology, involving workshops with women from the Kumiai community of San José de la Zorra, Baja California, Mexico. These workshops aim to spotlight the diversity of foods sourced from the collection of wild species/seasonal crops and to glean insights into the perspectives on food culture from the region. As a result, the study unveils ingredients cultivated and gathered across different seasons, offering a glimpse into the community’s rich food knowledge. A design proposal is articulated to craft recipes that not only respect the essence of the community’s way of life but also resonate with the profound connection people have to the territory. Moreover, the research delves into the significance of decolonizing cookbooks by amplifying indigenous food knowledge and reclaiming narratives from a biocultural perspective. The cookbook emerges as a tool for igniting dialogue about food in relation with the social-ecological context of indigenous and rural communities in northwestern Mexico. Furthermore, it proposes that this model can be adapted to other contexts, needs, and preferences, thereby effectively linking food and territory while challenging dominant culinary narratives. |
doi_str_mv | 10.5751/ES-15387-290412 |
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The impetus for crafting a cookbook alongside an indigenous community in northwestern Mexico stems from the dynamic process of exchanging ecological and food knowledge, where the following questions are posed: What foundational knowledge and essential ingredients underlie the community's food system? And how might the cookbook serve as a catalyst for knowledge exchange and transdisciplinary collaboration? Adopting a qualitative approach, the research employs participatory methodology, involving workshops with women from the Kumiai community of San José de la Zorra, Baja California, Mexico. These workshops aim to spotlight the diversity of foods sourced from the collection of wild species/seasonal crops and to glean insights into the perspectives on food culture from the region. As a result, the study unveils ingredients cultivated and gathered across different seasons, offering a glimpse into the community’s rich food knowledge. A design proposal is articulated to craft recipes that not only respect the essence of the community’s way of life but also resonate with the profound connection people have to the territory. Moreover, the research delves into the significance of decolonizing cookbooks by amplifying indigenous food knowledge and reclaiming narratives from a biocultural perspective. The cookbook emerges as a tool for igniting dialogue about food in relation with the social-ecological context of indigenous and rural communities in northwestern Mexico. Furthermore, it proposes that this model can be adapted to other contexts, needs, and preferences, thereby effectively linking food and territory while challenging dominant culinary narratives.</description><identifier>ISSN: 1708-3087</identifier><identifier>EISSN: 1708-3087</identifier><identifier>DOI: 10.5751/ES-15387-290412</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>Ottawa: Resilience Alliance</publisher><subject>Biodiversity ; Collaboration ; Community life ; Community support ; Consumption ; Cookbooks ; Cooperation ; Crops ; Culture ; Decolonization ; Environmental management ; Exchanging ; Food ; Food consumption ; Food preferences ; Food processing ; Food quality ; Food resources ; Food sources ; Indigenous peoples ; Ingredients ; Knowledge ; Knowledge management ; Multiculturalism & pluralism ; Narratives ; Native peoples ; Natural resources ; Procurement management ; Recipes ; Research methodology ; Rural areas ; Rural communities ; Tourism ; Workshops</subject><ispartof>Ecology and society, 2024-11, Vol.29 (4), Article art12</ispartof><rights>2024. 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The impetus for crafting a cookbook alongside an indigenous community in northwestern Mexico stems from the dynamic process of exchanging ecological and food knowledge, where the following questions are posed: What foundational knowledge and essential ingredients underlie the community's food system? And how might the cookbook serve as a catalyst for knowledge exchange and transdisciplinary collaboration? Adopting a qualitative approach, the research employs participatory methodology, involving workshops with women from the Kumiai community of San José de la Zorra, Baja California, Mexico. These workshops aim to spotlight the diversity of foods sourced from the collection of wild species/seasonal crops and to glean insights into the perspectives on food culture from the region. As a result, the study unveils ingredients cultivated and gathered across different seasons, offering a glimpse into the community’s rich food knowledge. A design proposal is articulated to craft recipes that not only respect the essence of the community’s way of life but also resonate with the profound connection people have to the territory. Moreover, the research delves into the significance of decolonizing cookbooks by amplifying indigenous food knowledge and reclaiming narratives from a biocultural perspective. The cookbook emerges as a tool for igniting dialogue about food in relation with the social-ecological context of indigenous and rural communities in northwestern Mexico. 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The impetus for crafting a cookbook alongside an indigenous community in northwestern Mexico stems from the dynamic process of exchanging ecological and food knowledge, where the following questions are posed: What foundational knowledge and essential ingredients underlie the community's food system? And how might the cookbook serve as a catalyst for knowledge exchange and transdisciplinary collaboration? Adopting a qualitative approach, the research employs participatory methodology, involving workshops with women from the Kumiai community of San José de la Zorra, Baja California, Mexico. These workshops aim to spotlight the diversity of foods sourced from the collection of wild species/seasonal crops and to glean insights into the perspectives on food culture from the region. As a result, the study unveils ingredients cultivated and gathered across different seasons, offering a glimpse into the community’s rich food knowledge. A design proposal is articulated to craft recipes that not only respect the essence of the community’s way of life but also resonate with the profound connection people have to the territory. Moreover, the research delves into the significance of decolonizing cookbooks by amplifying indigenous food knowledge and reclaiming narratives from a biocultural perspective. The cookbook emerges as a tool for igniting dialogue about food in relation with the social-ecological context of indigenous and rural communities in northwestern Mexico. Furthermore, it proposes that this model can be adapted to other contexts, needs, and preferences, thereby effectively linking food and territory while challenging dominant culinary narratives.</abstract><cop>Ottawa</cop><pub>Resilience Alliance</pub><doi>10.5751/ES-15387-290412</doi><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record> |
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subjects | Biodiversity Collaboration Community life Community support Consumption Cookbooks Cooperation Crops Culture Decolonization Environmental management Exchanging Food Food consumption Food preferences Food processing Food quality Food resources Food sources Indigenous peoples Ingredients Knowledge Knowledge management Multiculturalism & pluralism Narratives Native peoples Natural resources Procurement management Recipes Research methodology Rural areas Rural communities Tourism Workshops |
title | Living community cookbook: transdisciplinary collaboration for constructing recipes with biocultural value |
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