Be My Guest
Reflections on Food, Community and the Meaning of Generosity
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- 8,99 €
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- 8,99 €
Publisher Description
‘A brave and beautiful exploration into food, race, memory and the very meaning of life. I read it greedily - and so will you’ Meera Sodha, author of Fresh India
The dinner table, among friends, is where the best conversations take place – talk about the world, religion, politics, culture, love and cooking. In the same way, Be My Guest is a conversation about all these things, mediated through the sharing of food. We live in a world where some have too much and others not enough, where migrants and refugees are both welcomed and vilified, and where most of us spend less and less time cooking and eating together. Priya Basil explores the meaning and limits of hospitality today, and in doing so she invites us to consider that how much we have in common may depend on what we are willing to share.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Novelist Basil (Strangers on the 16:02) draws on memoir, storytelling, religion, politics, and philosophy in this delightful and ruminative culinary cultural study. A British-Indian writer raised in Kenya and now living in Berlin, Basil playfully begins this series of observations with the most primal guest-host relationship: "Mothers... host us as no one else can in their bodies. A nine-month gestation. Guest-ation?" Her own constant hunger for food as a child illustrates "the consumption epidemic ravaging our capitalist societies.... Our appetites must keep increasing to propel the economy." She explores food as power and writes of women cooking for "the affections of the family," in addition to reflecting on colonial India, where British administrators in 1876 ordered "a week-long feast for 68,000 officials" while "an estimated 100,000 Indians starved to death." Growing up Sikh in a Kenyan-Indian community, Basil struggled to "work out our place in the world," understood "the edge of the plate is like a border," and saw how the religious tradition of Langar, a post-worship communal meal, fostered "equality between all human beings and service to the community." Later, as she explains, those experiences guided her work with refugee advocacy groups in Germany. Basil's powerful intellectual curiosity is sure to intrigue readers.