Curry

By (author): Naben Ruthnum

No two curries are the same. This Curry asks why the dish is supposed to represent everything brown people eat, read, and do.

Curry is a dish that doesn’t quite exist, but, as this wildly funny and sharp essay points out, a dish that doesn’t properly exist can have infinite, equally authentic variations. By grappling with novels, recipes, travelogues, pop culture, and his own upbringing, Naben Ruthnum depicts how the distinctive taste of curry has often become maladroit shorthand for brown identity. With the sardonic wit of Gita Mehta’s Karma Cola and the refined, obsessive palette of Bill Buford’s Heat, Ruthnum sinks his teeth into the story of how the beloved flavor calcified into an aesthetic genre that limits the imaginations of writers, readers, and eaters. Following in the footsteps of Salman Rushdie’s Imaginary Homelands, Curry cracks open anew the staid narrative of an authentically Indian diasporic experience.

AUTHOR

Naben Ruthnum

Naben Ruthnum’s most recent works are the novel A Hero of Our Time and the horror novella Helpmeet. He’s written thrillers as Nathan Ripley and also writes for the screen. He lives in Toronto, Ontario.


Reviews

Curry, which reads more like a conversation than a hardcore critique, introduces Ruthnum’s philosophical and humorous side.” —Metro News


“Always engaging and sometimes funny, [Ruthnum is] most fierce when talking about currybooks …” —NOW Magazine


“Spot on, scathing, and often humorous, Ruthbum’s prose has a strong sense of voice that is unlike anything produced lately.” —Quill & Quire


“Ruthnum’s provocative intellectual journey in Curry: Eating, Reading, and Race explores this colonial endpoint, tracing the complex roots of curry as well as its diasporic colonization of the West in a series of interconnected essays that are as deliciously pleasant in narrative style as they are provocatively piquant in theoretical debate.” —Pop Matters


Curry proves itself to be a smart text, one that shows us the link between who we are and what we eat is never as straightforward as it may first appear.” —The Walrus


“Ruthnum picks apart Jhumpa Lahiri, Rohinton Mistry, Daniyal Mueenudin, Shoba Narayan, Madhur Jaffrey, and Harold and Kumar Go to White Castle with a thoughtful ambivalence that exhibits an admirable intellectual honesty …It’s fun to watch him think.” —The Toronto Star


Curry is a challenging, but refreshing take on the politics involved in our reading and choices, and one that reminds us of the messy ambiguity of racial identity, particularly in diasporic communities. Ruthnum’s mixing of personal history and vast reading experience make it valuable contribution to discussions of race in writing and popular culture.” —Hamilton Review of Books


Curry is an engaging and insightful long-form essay that connects the dots between the popular dish and how it functions as shorthand for brown identity in representing the food, culture and social perception of the South Asian diaspora.” —CBC Books


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Details

Dimensions:

144 Pages
4.93in * 7.37in * 0.29in
0.31lb

Published:

August 14, 2017

Publisher:

Coach House Books

ISBN:

9781552453513

Book Subjects:

COOKING / Essays & Narratives

Language:

eng

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