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The Racial Imaginary Of The Cold War Kitchen From Sokolniki Park To Chicagos South Side Kate A Baldwin

  • SKU: BELL-37527440
The Racial Imaginary Of The Cold War Kitchen From Sokolniki Park To Chicagos South Side Kate A Baldwin
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The Racial Imaginary Of The Cold War Kitchen From Sokolniki Park To Chicagos South Side Kate A Baldwin instant download after payment.

Publisher: Dartmouth
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.58 MB
Pages: 256
Author: Kate A. Baldwin
ISBN: 9781611688627, 1611688620
Language: English
Year: 2016

Product desciption

The Racial Imaginary Of The Cold War Kitchen From Sokolniki Park To Chicagos South Side Kate A Baldwin by Kate A. Baldwin 9781611688627, 1611688620 instant download after payment.

This book demonstrates the ways in which the kitchen--the centerpiece of domesticity and consumerism--was deployed as a recurring motif in the ideological and propaganda battles of the Cold War. Beginning with the famous Nixon-Khrushchev kitchen debate, Baldwin shows how Nixon turned the kitchen into a space of exception, while contemporary writers, artists, and activists depicted it as a site of cultural resistance. Focusing on a wide variety of literature and media from the United States and the Soviet Union, Baldwin reveals how the binary logic at work in Nixon's discourse--setting U.S. freedom against Soviet totalitarianism--erased the histories of slavery, gender subordination, colonialism, and racial genocide. The Racial Imaginary of the Cold War Kitchen treats the kitchen as symptomatic of these erasures, connecting issues of race, gender, and social difference across national boundaries. This rich and rewarding study--embracing the literature, film, and photography of the era--will appeal to a broad spectrum of scholars. Hardcover is un-jacketed.

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