‘Loboko Ya Mama’: Homemade recipes of belonging

Q4 Arts and Humanities
Miriam Adelina Ocadiz Arriaga
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Abstract

abstract During the COVID-19 pandemic, migrants in South Africa were not only exempted from social allowances such as food parcels but also targeted by xenophobic sentiments. Consequently, migrants who were already pushed to the margins of society experienced an increased sense of alienation from South African society. Based on Food for Change, 1 an online project in which eight forced migrant women from the Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda living in Gqeberha, South Africa, shared cooking recipes during the COVID-19 pandemic, this article approaches the cultivation of a sense of home and belonging through food. Using the concept of visceral politics, it analyses how food created a visceral experience in which embodied subjects acquire personal pleasure, affiliation with other embodied subjects and a sense of connectedness to their places of origin and South Africa. This approach documents how women exercised creative agency through their cooking by implementing knowledge from their home countries, acquiring new knowledge from other cuisines and adapting local ingredients and techniques to create meals that unite their households around the pleasure of eating ‘exactly like home’. In this way, they were able to reduce the impact that the alienating anti-migrant discourses outside their homes had on the everyday life inside them.
“Loboko Ya Mama”:归属感的自制食谱
在2019冠状病毒病大流行期间,南非的移民不仅没有获得食品包裹等社会补贴,而且还成为仇外情绪的目标。因此,已经被推到社会边缘的移徙者对南非社会的疏离感日益增加。“食物换变化”是一个在线项目,来自刚果民主共和国和乌干达的8名被迫移民妇女在2019冠状病毒病大流行期间在南非盖伯哈分享烹饪食谱,本文以该项目为基础,探讨通过食物培养家的感觉和归属感。使用内脏政治的概念,它分析了食物如何创造一种内脏体验,在这种体验中,被具体化的主体获得了个人愉悦,与其他被具体化的主体建立了联系,并与他们的原籍地和南非建立了联系。这一方法记录了女性如何通过烹饪运用来自本国的知识,从其他美食中获取新知识,并采用当地的食材和技术,创造出让家庭团结在“完全像家一样”的饮食乐趣中的食物,从而发挥创造力。通过这种方式,他们能够减少家庭外疏远的反移民话语对他们日常生活的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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AGENDA
AGENDA POETRY-
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