What’s cooking in multicultural films? Food, language and identity in British and American audiovisual products and their Italian dubbed version
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Show full item recordcomunitat-uji-handle:10234/10
comunitat-uji-handle2:10234/158177
comunitat-uji-handle3:10234/11633
comunitat-uji-handle4:10234/184484
REVISTESMetadata
Title
What’s cooking in multicultural films? Food, language and identity in British and American audiovisual products and their Italian dubbed versionAuthor (s)
Date
2019Publisher
Universitat Jaume I; Universitat de València; Universitat d' AlacantISSN
1889-4178; 1989-9335 (electrònic)Bibliographic citation
MONTI, Silvia. What’s cooking in multicultural films? Food, language and identity in British and American audiovisual products and their Italian dubbed version. MonTI. Monografías de Traducción e Interpretación, 2019, núm. esp. 4, p. 199-228.Type
info:eu-repo/semantics/articlePublisher version
http://www.e-revistes.uji.es/index.php/monti/article/view/4123Subject
Abstract
In a world in which multiculturalism and multilingualism pervade every layer of society, much attention has been recently focused on exploring the symbolic relevance of socio-cultural traditions in multiethnic contexts ... [+]
In a world in which multiculturalism and multilingualism pervade every layer of society, much attention has been recently focused on exploring the symbolic relevance of socio-cultural traditions in multiethnic contexts of interaction. In particular, contemporary British and American films often investigate the importance of ethnic food as a key entry to cultural and linguistic memory in immigrant communities in Europe and the USA. Starting from these observations, this paper sets out to investigate the socio-cultural and linguistic functions food naming serves as an identity/ethnicity tool in both the original and the Italian dubbed version of such intercultural films as Bend it Like Beckham, My Big Fat Greek Wedding, Ae Fond Kiss, The Mistress of Spices, My Life In Ruins, Eat Pray Love, The Hundred-Foot Journey, My Big Fat Greek Wedding 2, where the immigrant characters express their hybrid identity through the recurrent use of intra-sentential code-switching (Myers-Scotton 1993) from they-code to we-code (Gumperz 1982) when quoting the original names of their traditional dishes, thus symbolically and linguistically representing the transcultural and translanguaging space (Wei 2011) they live in. [-]
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MonTI, 2019, núm. esp. 4Rights
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess