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Week 4: Zapatista Corn

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As I looked into the issue of the Zapatista Corn, the more I am reminded of the importance that agriculture and food play in forming culture. It’s something that I was not really conscious of before, but when I really think about it it seems that so much of what we associate with culture is … read full post >>
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Cooking Lesson Commentary

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“Cooking Lesson” portrays a married Mexican woman in a cooking setting in a household. Interestingly, the story deals with the symbolism of cooking which can be compared to the act of traditional feminine ‘role.’ The method of writing can be … Continue reading read full post >>
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Cooking Lesson Commentary

Posted by: feedwordpress

“Cooking Lesson” portrays a married Mexican woman in a cooking setting in a household. Interestingly, the story deals with the symbolism of cooking which can be compared to the act of traditional feminine ‘role.’ The method of writing can be … Continue reading read full post >>
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Without Means to an End

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I found that "Cooking Lesson" by Rosario Castellanos demonstrated the dual wielding consciousness of the woman of her internal wants and what people expect from her. The main character in this poem is a married woman preparing a meal for when her husband returns. In between her fumbles at culinary prowess, she reminisces on stages of her marriage. The memories of her marital strife mirror the feeble attempt of preparing her dinner. Her flower metaphors congeal cohesively to convey that the suffocating role of women as wives permeates every aspect of their lives, especially ones expected of traditional housewives. The craft of cooking is a cultural practice that requires discipline, attention, and time. The main character with her fantasies playing out of actions she wishes she could take as well as the fear surrounding being a failing wife distracts her from her meal just as it distracts her from her loss of autonomy. It makes sense that Rosario Castellanos would feel foreign in a kitchen, a place that often is spent with older relatives throughout adolescence, as Castellanos parents died when she was 15 years old. The pristine whiteness of the kitchen and frosty package of the beef broil contrasts starkly to the bleeding ripped open package and sunburnt back. The same tearing and pleasure of her back when her husband bore his weight on her can be sensed throughout the piece.

So much is expected of women, much less when historic marriage served as a maneuver for acquiring wealth, ownership over a woman, and a guarantee of a continued bloodline. Castellanos own anxiety over what defines as a wife resurfaces many times in the poem and is crushing to consider that these anxieties could have manifested from her multiple miscarriages before she was able to give birth to a son. Wanting to be the infallible house figure society expects her to be is much more difficult under the constrains of depression, insomnia, and infertility. Lacking the means to the end in what she perceives to be the receiving end of a losing game. The need to justify your actions in the extensive detail that the author goes through is reminiscent of victims of trauma and abuse. It makes me wonder how often in historical marriages were households transformed into volatile environments for the benefit of the husband. Her accounts of his being offended by her virginity, his inability to trust her, end in creating a sediment of armor. Her dissociative analyses of a marriage too much, then too little, then burnt to a crisp. She gains back her autonomy but only in a sardonically happy way, which makes me sad.

My question is more personal: How have you seen the reflection of this poem in the lives of women and wives who surround you. How is this an example of culture?


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Without Means to an End

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I found that "Cooking Lesson" by Rosario Castellanos demonstrated the dual wielding consciousness of the woman of her internal wants and what people expect from her. The main character in this poem is a married woman preparing a meal for when her husband returns. In between her fumbles at culinary prowess, she reminisces on stages of her marriage. The memories of her marital strife mirror the feeble attempt of preparing her dinner. Her flower metaphors congeal cohesively to convey that the suffocating role of women as wives permeates every aspect of their lives, especially ones expected of traditional housewives. The craft of cooking is a cultural practice that requires discipline, attention, and time. The main character with her fantasies playing out of actions she wishes she could take as well as the fear surrounding being a failing wife distracts her from her meal just as it distracts her from her loss of autonomy. It makes sense that Rosario Castellanos would feel foreign in a kitchen, a place that often is spent with older relatives throughout adolescence, as Castellanos parents died when she was 15 years old. The pristine whiteness of the kitchen and frosty package of the beef broil contrasts starkly to the bleeding ripped open package and sunburnt back. The same tearing and pleasure of her back when her husband bore his weight on her can be sensed throughout the piece.

So much is expected of women, much less when historic marriage served as a maneuver for acquiring wealth, ownership over a woman, and a guarantee of a continued bloodline. Castellanos own anxiety over what defines as a wife resurfaces many times in the poem and is crushing to consider that these anxieties could have manifested from her multiple miscarriages before she was able to give birth to a son. Wanting to be the infallible house figure society expects her to be is much more difficult under the constrains of depression, insomnia, and infertility. Lacking the means to the end in what she perceives to be the receiving end of a losing game. The need to justify your actions in the extensive detail that the author goes through is reminiscent of victims of trauma and abuse. It makes me wonder how often in historical marriages were households transformed into volatile environments for the benefit of the husband. Her accounts of his being offended by her virginity, his inability to trust her, end in creating a sediment of armor. Her dissociative analyses of a marriage too much, then too little, then burnt to a crisp. She gains back her autonomy but only in a sardonically happy way, which makes me sad.

My question is more personal: How have you seen the reflection of this poem in the lives of women and wives who surround you. How is this an example of culture?


read full post >>
Posted in: Blogs
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Without Means to an End

Posted by: feedwordpress

I found that "Cooking Lesson" by Rosario Castellanos demonstrated the dual wielding consciousness of the woman of her internal wants and what people expect from her. The main character in this poem is a married woman preparing a meal for when her husband returns. In between her fumbles at culinary prowess, she reminisces on stages of her marriage. The memories of her marital strife mirror the feeble attempt of preparing her dinner. Her flower metaphors congeal cohesively to convey that the suffocating role of women as wives permeates every aspect of their lives, especially ones expected of traditional housewives. The craft of cooking is a cultural practice that requires discipline, attention, and time. The main character with her fantasies playing out of actions she wishes she could take as well as the fear surrounding being a failing wife distracts her from her meal just as it distracts her from her loss of autonomy. It makes sense that Rosario Castellanos would feel foreign in a kitchen, a place that often is spent with older relatives throughout adolescence, as Castellanos parents died when she was 15 years old. The pristine whiteness of the kitchen and frosty package of the beef broil contrasts starkly to the bleeding ripped open package and sunburnt back. The same tearing and pleasure of her back when her husband bore his weight on her can be sensed throughout the piece.

So much is expected of women, much less when historic marriage served as a maneuver for acquiring wealth, ownership over a woman, and a guarantee of a continued bloodline. Castellanos own anxiety over what defines as a wife resurfaces many times in the poem and is crushing to consider that these anxieties could have manifested from her multiple miscarriages before she was able to give birth to a son. Wanting to be the infallible house figure society expects her to be is much more difficult under the constrains of depression, insomnia, and infertility. Lacking the means to the end in what she perceives to be the receiving end of a losing game. The need to justify your actions in the extensive detail that the author goes through is reminiscent of victims of trauma and abuse. It makes me wonder how often in historical marriages were households transformed into volatile environments for the benefit of the husband. Her accounts of his being offended by her virginity, his inability to trust her, end in creating a sediment of armor. Her dissociative analyses of a marriage too much, then too little, then burnt to a crisp. She gains back her autonomy but only in a sardonically happy way, which makes me sad.

My question is more personal: How have you seen the reflection of this poem in the lives of women and wives who surround you. How is this an example of culture?


read full post >>
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Cooking, Sacraments, and Cuauhtémoc in Castellanos’s “Cooking Lesson”

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I found Rosario Castellanos’s “Cooking Lesson” fascinating, since I had never read it previously. The theme of gender imbalance in Mexico runs throughout the story, and this is something I’ve always been interested in myself. In the beginning of the story, Castellanos writes some academic ruminations about hospitals, from which the narrator breaks by askingContinue reading "Cooking, Sacraments, and Cuauhtémoc in Castellanos’s “Cooking Lesson”" read full post >>
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Cooking Lesson

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This week’s reading offers a very peculiar and almost interpersonal approach to the dynamic of culture as food. Castellanos writes about a woman who is trapped within her kitchen without the skills or resources to succeed in preparing her husband good, quality meals. The strangest thing in this short story is the notion that from […] read full post >>
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Food, Gender and Culture in Rosario Castellanos’ “Cooking Lesson”

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The candor, vulnerability, and passionate reflection with which Rosario Castellanos’ “Cooking Lesson” is told was refreshing to read. The story was a compelling window into the mind and thoughts of a ‘housewife’- a role that has trapped, be it willingly or unwillingly, so many women throughout history, and one that transcends culture and place. What […] read full post >>
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WEEK 4: Food and Drink, Cooking Lessons

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I thoroughly enjoyed reading this story by Castellanos. I found the language that she used to be descriptive and related to a lot of the things she was writing about (not in terms of marriage) but in terms of society’s expectations of women. I found it interesting how a lot of comparisons about a women […] read full post >>
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