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'Food is life': Documenting the politics of food in Melanesia

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 22:04 authored by Ceridwen SparkCeridwen Spark
In this article, I discuss two recent examples of women's filmmaking in Melanesia. The documentaries are Tanah Mama (2014), focused on West Papua and Café Niugini (2015), set in Papua New Guinea. Both films explore and represent food in profoundly different ways. Here, I consider their respective depictions of food, demonstrating that Tanah Mama represents food as sustenance while Café Niugini renders food as 'cuisine' through the 'creative performance' of cookery. Nevertheless, and as I argue, both documentaries reflect the filmmakers' interest in representing issues associated with food in the Pacific, including the importance of Indigenous access to land, population management, gender roles and the impact of changing cultural values on food consumption and health.

History

Related Materials

Journal

Pacific Journalism Review

Volume

21

Issue

1

Start page

77

End page

85

Total pages

9

Publisher

Auckland University of Technology * School of Communication Studies, Pacific Media Centre

Place published

New Zealand

Language

English

Copyright

© 2015 AUT and individual contributors

Former Identifier

2006055998

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2015-11-17

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