Monday, October 23, 2017

Join us on November 13th for Dr. Jennifer Jordan's Talk: Edible Memory: How Tomatoes Became Heirlooms and Apples Became Antiques

In honor of the upcoming holidays where feasts aplenty will be served, Dr. Jennifer Jordan will be teaching us about how the stories we tell each other about the past shape the food we eat. Even as countless varieties of plants have vanished permanently from the face of the earth, people are working hard to preserve the biodiversity and "genetic heritage" not only of rare panda bears or singular orchids, but also the plants of the backyard vegetable garden. 

A major consequence of this work is the emergence of heirloom food—varieties of fruit, vegetables, grains and livestock left behind by modern agriculture, but now experiencing a striking resurgence. Through a close examination of apples and tomatoes, this talk reveals the phenomenon of edible memory—the infusing of food, heirloom and otherwise, with connections to the past, in ways both deeply personal and inherently social. Paying attention to edible memory reveals deep connections between food and memory, social and physical landscapes, pleasures and possibilities.


Jennifer Jordan is professor of sociology and urban studies at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. She is the author of Edible Memory: The Lure of Heirloom Tomatoes and other Forgotten Foods (University of Chicago Press, 2015) and Structures of Memory: Understanding Urban Change in Berlin and Beyond (Stanford University Press, 2006) as well as numerous scholarly articles on topics ranging from kitchen gardens and collective memory, apples and German national identity, and dumplings. Her latest research delves deeper into two kinds of edible landscapes—historical kitchen gardens, and a thousand years of hop cultivation. Her research always addresses the ways that the stories we tell about the past shape the world around us—whether in orchards and vegetable gardens (in her latest book), or in the urban landscape of Berlin (in her earlier research). She has been a Fulbright scholar, a senior scientist at the Austrian Academy of Sciences, and a fellow at the US Holocaust Memorial Museum.