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Jewish Food in the Global South
Mar 4, 2017 @ 11:00 am - Mar 5, 2017 @ 5:00 pm
The Carolina Center for Jewish Studies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill is hosting a two-day symposium March 4-5, to explore Jewish food in the global south. The symposium, which is open to the campus community and general public, will include a cooking class held at Southern Season, a film festival at The Varsity and a full day of panel discussions and a keynote address. More than 20 guest speakers, including James Beard award-winning chefs, academic scholars, journalists and documentarians will participate in the program.
Appealing to both public and academic audiences, this symposium will investigate what makes a food “Jewish” in the diverse social and cultural contexts of our global markets and networks, and how that designation affects the lives of its creators and consumers. Through examination of specific foods such as pastrami, iconic dishes such as hummus, and particular cooking traditions that negotiate the laws of kashrut, participants will discuss how the distinct social and economic dimensions of different regional cultures, including the American South, determine how Jewish foods are prepared, sold, consumed, celebrated, and interpreted.
The weekend kicks off Saturday, March 4 at 11 a.m. with a Jewish foods cooking class held at Southern Season with journalist Joan Nathan, author of the upcoming “King Solomon’s Table: A Culinary Exploration of Jewish Cooking from Around the World” and many other books on Jewish culinary topics. Cost is $50 and pre-registration is required. Saturday afternoon features a film festival at The Varsity. The screenings will be from 4-7p.m. with “Streit’s Matzo and the American Dream” beginning at 4p.m. and “Deli-Man” beginning at 5:30p.m. The film screenings are free and open to the public, no tickets or registration required.
On Sunday, March 5, four panel discussions will focus on the changing scene of the American Jewish deli, the history of the Jewish kitchen, evolving ingredients and reinvention of Jewish dishes, and contemporary expressions of Jewish global southern cuisine. The day concludes with a keynote salon with New York Times journalist Kim Severson, author and journalist Joan Nathan and James Beard award-winning chef Alon Shaya of Shaya Restaurant in New Orleans. Pre-registration is required for the Sunday symposium. Cost is $10 for general admission and free for UNC students and this includes lunch, an afternoon reception and refreshment breaks.
The full conference schedule and online registration can be found at: http://jewishstudies.unc.edu
The symposium was organized by professors Marcie Cohen Ferris and Gabrielle Berlinger of the Carolina Center for Jewish Studies and the Department of American Studies. Jewish Food in the Global South is also part of the new series for the humanities—Carolina’s Human Heart—launched by the College of Arts and Sciences for the academic year 2016–17.