Sunday, June 16, 2013

Weirdest thing I realized yesterday tying into the course's theme of Food and Feasting.
I was visiting my boyfriend's mom, and as I sat in her kitchen I noticed her having alot of pictures and metal decor of fruit or baskets of fruit. I reminded me of the fruit we've been seeing in paintings and on the cover of The Edible Woman. It also reminded me how my mom has pictures of fruit in her kitchen. Her kitchen tiles even have them! So I concluded, these pictures are so common in kitchens as it ties into the theme of feasting. Like we talked about in class, kitchens are centers of preparations for feasts and where people/families are brought together by the notion of food and feasting. So, the fruit and the fruit baskets represent that notion and symbolize the unity and welcome people to come and share the fruit from the basket. What a trip!

Thursday, June 13, 2013

HOW TO MAKE FISH COUSCOUS

Hey class!

After watching The Secret of the Grain, I wanted to try this famous fish couscous! I found a simple video that walks you through the process step-by-step. For anyone that is interesting in cooking and from our class presentations, several of you guys were, I would recommend making this dish. It may not be as notorious as Slimane's ex-wife's dish, but it's a starter! Enjoy.


"Children: With more than one, you're a sitting duck."

I came across this article on Lauren Sandler, who recently released a book titled One and Only about wanting to have only one child and the judgment she receives from society because of her supposed selfishness. To quote, "she fiercely challenges society's judgments"on a woman. I found this article so, so relevant to what we talked about in class throughout the quarter regarding the female stereotype, and what we've been trying to move away from -evidently we have not done a very good job so far. Regardless, I think Sandler's book will make for a great read over the summer!

Some excerpts from the article:




Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Woman, Make Me a Sandwich!: Women's gender role as perceived by media (Presentation)

Here's a copy of my group's presentation if you would to check out any of the interesting pictures/videos!

http://prezi.com/cj9niili9fth/?utm_campaign=share&utm_medium=copy


Sunday, June 9, 2013

Vampyres in House of Night Series

There are so many books, TV shows, and movies about vampires that are popular today. I personally love these and watch/read a LOT of them (Twilight, Vampire Diaries, True Blood, Vampire Academy...)

However, out of all the shows and books I watch/read, I found the series I'm currently reading, House of Night, to be the most interesting in relation to the topic of our class.




In this series, the drinking of blood by a vampyre is extremely pleasurable for both the vampyre and the human. The consumption of blood is described almost like how sex would be described:
"This time I leaned into him and touched my tongue to his lip, taking the drop of blood into my mouth where it exploded ― heat, sensation, and a rush of pleasure I'd never known."
"The taste exploded in my mouth. As my saliva touched the shallow wound his blood began to flow more quickly, and with a moan that I hardly recognized as my own, I opened my mouth and pressed my lips to his skin, licking up the delicious scarlet line. [...] His head fell back and I heard him groan "yes." One of his hands cupped my butt and the other one went under my sweater to squeeze my breast. 
 His touch only made it better. Heat slammed through my body, setting me on fire. Like someone else was in control of my movements, my hand slid from Heath's shoulder, down his chest, to rub over the hard lump that was in the front of his jeans. I sucked on his neck. Rational thought flew from my mind. All I could do was feel and taste and touch. Somewhere in the depths of my mind I knew I was reacting on a level that was almost animalistic in its need and ferocity, but I didn't care."
It is obvious in these quotes that the consumption of blood is linked to sex and fulfills the hunger for not only nutritional needs to survive but also sexual desires.

What's more interesting is that in the world of House of Night, females dominate the vampyre society. The most powerful vampyres are females rather than males. So unlike what we typically saw in class this quarter, the females are the ones that consume the males and use males for pleasure. Highly ranked vampyres called High Priestesses (always female) typically have two men in their lives. One that they are together with (boyfriend or husband), and a human consort literally just for the purpose of fulfilling the vampyres' bloodlust.

- Dain (Jennifer) Kwak

Thursday, June 6, 2013

A "Woman's" Food

I was on Youtube and encountered this video:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qMRDLCR8vAE

It has an interesting discussion of how certain foods are paired with specific genders.  Check it out!

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

 I see a lot of these funny ecards on social media sites online and happened to look into a few relating to our groups presentation of chocolate. Most of the ecards I just found funny, or they show the relationship chocolate has to sex, valentines day, love, indulgence, and women. This first image is piggy backing off of Evan's post about chocolate being related to the divine or "god like."
Touch-chocolate-reminders-ecard-someecards_large

Speaking of Hooters...

So a friend of mine on Instagram checked in to Hooters today, and she posted this picture of a sign inside the restaurant.

 It clearly shows the different treatment of males and women, relating to their bodies.

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

O'Hara's in Westwood--Just Like Hooters?

Hey guys,

I came across this video that has to do with the Burger and Boobs group's presentation. Basically, a female bartender at O'Hara's, the local bar in Westwood, is suing the bar for the inappropriate dress code, fans that would blow the female's skirts and expose them, and other policies in the bar. The reporter says that the O'Hara's policies were established to boost sales.

I think this shows another example about how the industry caters to men, allowing not only to consume food and drinks but also their bodies--to make money. Sex sells. Also, I felt that the example of Hooters feels far removed from UCLA and the students here. However, it's clear that the objectification of women can hit very close to home.

http://www.cnn.com/video/data/2.0/video/us/2012/06/27/dnt-bartender-sues-over-skimpy-skirts.kcal.html

The Art of Consumption :)







http://www.naturalnews.com/038092_hot_chocolate_superfood_health_benefits.html

This article further expands on the health benefits of Chocolate. However, the main reason I was 
drawn to this article for was due to the wording that the author chose to use throughout the whole article. 
The wording was sensual or very lofty and praising chocolate as divine and godlike. It is praising 
addiction to chocolate as a sign taht your body knows when something is "good". "The Heavenly Elixir"
title for one of the sections also further emphasizes the use of chocolate as a link to the divine. 
Also, the recipe sounds absolutely delicious. 

Sunday, June 2, 2013

The Impossible Decision

I came across this article in The New Yorker about going to graduate school for English or Comparative Literature, and it immediately reminded me of Duncan, Fischer and Trevor in The Edible Woman and the class, because we are taking Comparative Literature -although only at the undergraduate level.

In short, the author, Joshua Rothman, starts by writing about how graduate school is a "bad idea in the long run." He does this very interestingly by quoting a hedge fund friend who responded with the following statistics when asked if postgraduate studies in English or Comparative Literature is worth it:

"... focus on the “base rates”: that is, on the numbers that give you a broad statistical picture of outcomes from graduate school in the humanities. What percentage of graduate students end up with tenure? (About one in four.) How much more unhappy are graduate students than other people? (About fifty-four per cent of graduate students report feeling so depressed they have “a hard time functioning,” as opposed to ten per cent of the general population.) If you take a broader view of the profession, it seems like a terrible idea to go to graduate school." 


The "depression and hard time functioning" part of his spiel here really reminded me of Duncan and his rant about how things in graduate school get "more and more stale" and how he could not write more than a sentence a day (102).



Although it might seem as if one should be completely put off by the idea of attending graduate school in the humanities here and that Duncan is right, Rothman also brings forth the upsides of attending graduate school based on his own experience, which needless to say, is as, if not more, compelling than the cons of attending.

Granted, the article is not directly related to the theme and content of the class, but I still found it quite an intriguing, lighthearted and somewhat ironic read and thought it worth sharing, especially after seeing the minute connection to The Edible Woman. 

P.S. Approach the article with a pinch or two (or even three) of salt and don't use it to analyze your own situation or let it deter you from applying!

P.P.S. I do not think it is a "terrible idea to go to graduate school" at all.