Control and Resistance reveals the various ways in which Food writing of the early-Franco era was a potent political tool, producing ways of eating and thinking about Food that privileged patriotism over personal desire.
The author examines a diverse range of official and non-official Food texts to highlight how Discourse helped construct and contest identities in line with the three ideological pillars of the regime: autarky, prescriptive gender roles, and monolithic nationalism..
Control and Resistance reveals the various ways in which Food writing of the early-Franco era was a potent political tool, producing ways of eating and thinking about Food that privileged patriotism over personal desire