"If you want to, you can do it!": home cooking and masculinity makeover in "Le chef contre-attaque"

Jonatan Leer

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportBidrag til bog/antologiForskningpeer review

Abstract

In the innovative show The Naked Chef (1999–2001), Jamie Oliver demonstrates how home cooking—a traditional feminine practice—can be a way for a “modern” man to obtain success in various social contexts. In this chapter, I analyze the gendering of home cooking in a cooking show from a French context, namely Le Chef Contre-Attaque (The Chef Strikes Back) (2009) with Cyril Lignac. In this show, the charming media darling goes from lifestyle expert to become a moral entrepreneur as he takes on a new food-related “social problem” every week. In the episode chosen, Lignac is trying to convince a group of working-class French men who have never cooked at home before that they must learn this craft in order to live up to contemporary gender ideals. During the culinary (and masculine) makeover, a series of tropes of the gendering of home kitchen cultures are being negotiated in the meeting between the “old-fashioned/sexist trainees” (working-class) and the “modern and dynamic” (middle-class) coach; these negotiations both echo and differ from the debates raised in the British literature on masculinity and home in cooking shows. The analysis accentuate the classed character of domestic cooking, and argues that the show exemplifies that debates about home cooking are not only about the gendered ordering of men and women in everyday life practices. Men’s participation in home cooking can also work to create hierarchies between middle-class and working-class masculinity.
OriginalsprogDansk
TitelFood, masculinities and home
RedaktørerMichelle Szabo, Shelley L. Koch
Antal sider15
UdgivelsesstedNew York
ForlagBloomsbury Academic
Publikationsdato17 maj 2017
Sider182-196
ISBN (Trykt)9781474262323
StatusUdgivet - 17 maj 2017

Emneord

  • Kultur
  • Køn
  • Seksualitet

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