
Culinary Claims
Indigenous Restaurant Politics in Canada
L. Sasha Gora(Author)
University of Toronto Press
Published on 25. March 2025
Book
Paperback/Softback
470 pages
978-1-4875-4475-1 (ISBN)
Description
Culinary Claims explores the complex relationships between wild plants and introduced animals, Indigenous foodways, and Canadian regulations. Blending food studies with environmental history, the book examines how cuisines reflect social and political issues related to cultural representation, restaurants, and food sovereignty.
L. Sasha Gora chronicles the rise of Indigenous restaurants and their influence on Canadian food culture, engaging with questions about how shifts in appetite reflect broader shifts in imaginations of local environments and identities. Drawing on a diverse range of sources - from recipes and menus to artworks and television shows - the book discusses both historical and contemporary representations of Indigenous foodways and how they are changing amid the relocalization of food systems.
Culinary Claims tells a new story of settler colonialism and Indigenous resistance, emphasizing the critical role that restaurants play in Canada's cultural landscape. It investigates how food shapes our understanding of place and the politics that underpin this relationship. Ultimately, the book asks, What insights can historians gain from restaurants - and their legacies - as reflections of Indigenous and settler negotiations over cultural claims to land?
L. Sasha Gora chronicles the rise of Indigenous restaurants and their influence on Canadian food culture, engaging with questions about how shifts in appetite reflect broader shifts in imaginations of local environments and identities. Drawing on a diverse range of sources - from recipes and menus to artworks and television shows - the book discusses both historical and contemporary representations of Indigenous foodways and how they are changing amid the relocalization of food systems.
Culinary Claims tells a new story of settler colonialism and Indigenous resistance, emphasizing the critical role that restaurants play in Canada's cultural landscape. It investigates how food shapes our understanding of place and the politics that underpin this relationship. Ultimately, the book asks, What insights can historians gain from restaurants - and their legacies - as reflections of Indigenous and settler negotiations over cultural claims to land?
Reviews / Votes
"Culinary Claims examines culinary tourism, focusing not on eating establishments intended by and for Indigenous communities but on how Indigenous food has been represented to outsiders. This timely and important work contributes to the goals of Canadian truth and reconciliation, addressing centuries of colonial exploitation and racism. Demonstrating that food is both a site of Indigenous exploitation and a means for communities to assert their Canadian citizenship, Culinary Claims makes a significant contribution to the field of Canadian Indigenous history." -- Jeffrey Pilcher, Professor of Food History, University of Toronto "Demonstrating the diversity of Indigenous restaurants and their relevance to contemporary conversations about how food represents and imagines place, Gora skilfully maps the different worlds Indigenous restaurants can and do represent. Gora's extensive scholarship demonstrates her deep engagement with both food studies and social change." -- Nathalie M. Cooke, Professor and Foodways Scholar, McGill UniversityMore details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Toronto
Canada
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Dimensions
Height: 231 mm
Width: 154 mm
Thickness: 30 mm
Weight
638 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-4875-4475-1 (9781487544751)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
L. Sasha Gora is a cultural historian and writer with a focus on food studies, the environmental humanities, and contemporary art.
Content
List of Illustrations
Preface
Introduction: You Are Welcome
1. Agricultural Flagpoles
2. From Trains to Tundra
3. Restaurants and Representation
4. An Edible Exhibition
5. One Address, Three Restaurants
6. A Meal for a Chief
7. Culinary Resurgence
8. Seal Tartare
9. Where the Beaver and Buffalo Roam
10. Salmon and the F-Word
Conclusion: The North
Acknowledgements
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Preface
Introduction: You Are Welcome
1. Agricultural Flagpoles
2. From Trains to Tundra
3. Restaurants and Representation
4. An Edible Exhibition
5. One Address, Three Restaurants
6. A Meal for a Chief
7. Culinary Resurgence
8. Seal Tartare
9. Where the Beaver and Buffalo Roam
10. Salmon and the F-Word
Conclusion: The North
Acknowledgements
Notes
Bibliography
Index