Culinary Coercion: Nurturing Traditional Gender Roles in Ambridge
ISBN: 978-1-78743-286-4, eISBN: 978-1-78743-285-7
Publication date: 5 October 2017
Abstract
This chapter explores the queasy relationship between food and sex on The Archers. For listeners, food provides an imaginative reference point; consumption of food hints towards characters embodiment and occupation of physical space. To the extent that these characters have boundaries, the way they approach and react to food reveals their rigidity or permeability, and the tones in which characters offer, provide, prepare, coax and force food upon one another tells us a lot about the sexual politics at play in Ambridge. In The Archers, women cook and men eat. Characters who rebel against this norm often subvert traditional masculinity in other ways.
Through close reading (and obsessive listening), this chapter analyses the ways in which food allows the relationships on The Archers to act as foils to one another. It also explores: food as metaphor; food used both to sustain and fortify the boundaries of the self and to besiege the ego boundaries of others; how characters are given weight in acoustic space; female emancipation; male helplessness; the hunger/satiety/aural claustrophobia of listeners.
Keywords
Acknowledgements
Acknowledgements
My thanks to Cara Courage and Nicola Headlam for creating Academic Archers; for their intellectual curiosity and generosity with it, and to Nicola, in particular, for her observation about the different experiences of hearing direct and indirect speech. Also, to Joanna Dobson for her encouragement and proofreader’s eye.
Citation
Medland, A. (2017), "Culinary Coercion: Nurturing Traditional Gender Roles in Ambridge", Courage, C. and Headlam, N. (Ed.) Custard, Culverts and Cake, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 345-363. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-78743-285-720171028
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2017 Emerald Publishing Limited