From Fasting to Fast Food in Kumasi, Ghana
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] Psyche Williams-Forson. “I Haven’t Eaten If I Don’t Have My Soup and Fufu”: Cultural Preservation through Food and Foodways among Ghanaian Migrants in the United States , 2014, Food and Culture.
[2] E. Schildkrout. Recommended Readings , 2002, Winning the Silicon Sweepstakes.
[3] J. Kinabo,et al. No Meal without Ugali? Social Significance of Food and Consumption in a Tanzanian Village , 2012 .
[4] Gracia C. Clark. African Market Women: Seven Life Stories from Ghana , 2010 .
[5] E. Renne. Mass Producing Food Traditions for West Africans Abroad , 2007 .
[6] R. Overå. When men do women's work: structural adjustment, unemployment and changing gender relations in the informal economy of Accra, Ghana , 2007, The Journal of Modern African Studies.
[7] Fran Osseo-Asare. Food Culture in Sub-Saharan Africa , 2005 .
[8] J. Holtzman. In a cup of tea: Commodities and history among Samburu pastoralists in northern Kenya , 2003 .
[9] J. Holtzman. POLITICS AND GASTROPOLITICS: GENDER AND THE POWER OF FOOD IN TWO AFRICAN PASTORALIST SOCIETIES , 2002 .
[10] M. Witte. Long Live the Dead: Changing Funeral Celebrations in Asante, Ghana , 2002 .
[11] K. Elwert-Kretschmer. Culinary innovation, love, and the social organization of learning in a West African city , 2001, Food & foodways.
[12] Andrea Cornwall. Wayward women and useless men: contest and change in gender relations in Ado-Odo , 2001 .
[13] Gracia C. Clark. Mothering, Work, and Gender in Urban Asante Ideology and Practice , 1999 .
[14] Keith Shear. “Not Welfare or Uplift Work”: White Women, Masculinity and Policing in South Africa , 1996 .
[15] T. Burke. 'Fork Up and Smile': Marketing, Colonial Knowledge and the Female Subject in Zimbabwe , 1996 .
[16] Gracia C. Clark. Onions Are My Husband: Survival and Accumulation by West African Market Women , 1996 .
[17] Gracia C. Clark. Money, sex and cooking: manipulation of the paid/unpaid boundary by Asante market women , 1989 .