Griffith Review 78

A Matter of Taste

Griffith Review
Edited by Carody Culver, and contributions by Ashley Hay

Food is more than a matter of taste. From the comfort of the kitchen to the theatre of the restaurant, the glamour of the TV studio to the gloss of the cookbook page, the ways we frame and consume stories about food shape our cultural histories as much as our personal identities.

Griffith Review 78 serves up a smorgasbord of essays, fiction and reportage about what we eat and how we talk about it. It explores food as spectacle and status symbol, as fad and fantasy, as capital and cultural currency. Has the cult of the celebrity chef reached its twilight? How did food become a device of social stratification? Do early humans still shape our consumption habits? And if we are what we eat, then who are we in the twenty-first century?

Taking in table manners, fast and slow food, the dilemma of diets and the ethics of production, from sautéed and sous vide to nothing but raw, Griffith Review 78 takes all things food and puts them on a plate.

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Contributor Bio

Carody Culver is a writer and editor. She's been a contributing editor for Peppermint magazine and has written for publications including Kill Your Darlings, The Lifted Brow, Books+Publishing and Griffith Review. Her chapbook, The Morgue I Think the Deader It Gets, was published by Cordite in 2022, and she's been a featured Australian poet on the Best American Poetry blog.

Ashley Hay is an award-winning writer, editor and journalist whose work spans fiction, narrative non-fiction, essays and science writing. She has published eight books as well as a range of essays, articles, reviews and short stories for anthologies and journals including The Monthly, Australian Geographic, Creative Non-Fiction, The Guardian and Griffith Review. She is also the former editor of Griffith Review.

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