Nuno Domingos explore les complexités des pratiques sociales et culturelles, en se concentrant particulièrement sur l'histoire du colonialisme portugais et la période de l'Estado Novo. Son travail examine la sociologie de la lecture, de la musique et du sport, analysant les pratiques corporelles et les cultures populaires. Actuellement, ses recherches portent sur l'anthropologie de l'alimentation, étudiant la production et les usages sociaux du vin portugais. Son œuvre académique offre une perspective fascinante pour comprendre comment les structures sociales et les expressions culturelles s'entremêlent dans divers contextes historiques.
In articles for the newspaper O Brado Africano in the mid-1950s, poet and
journalist Jose Craveirinha described the ways in which the Mozambican
football players in the suburbs of Lourenco Marques (now Maputo) adapted the
European sport to their own expressive ends.
At a time when the relationship between ‘the country' and ‘the city' is in flux worldwide, the value and meanings of food associated with both places continue to be debated. Building upon the foundation of Raymond Williams' classic work, The Country and the City, this volume examines how conceptions of the country and the city invoked in relation to food not only reflect their changing relationship but have also been used to alter the very dynamics through which countryside and cities, and the food grown and eaten within them, are produced and sustained. Leading scholars in the study of food offer ethnographic studies of peasant homesteads, family farms, community gardens, state food industries, transnational supermarkets, planning offices, tourist boards, and government ministries in locales across the globe. This fascinating collection demonstrates that, whether categorized as rural or urban, food around the world today has been shaped by, and in turn has shaped, historical processes through which the country, the city, and the relationship between these places and their foods have continually, and sometimes dramatically, been reconstituted. This text provides vital new insight into the contested dynamics of food and will be key reading for upper-level students and scholars of food studies, anthropology, history and geography.