Abstract
By focusing on the cookbook Peace Never Tasted So Sweet, this article argues that CODEPINK strategically combines peace activist and food literacies to engage audiences in their antiwar efforts, strategies that take on benefits and drawbacks. Although feminist scholars from a variety of disciplines have studied cookbooks, researchers have yet to fully analyze the intersections of gendered activist literacies and cookbooks. Expanding upon arguments promoting food literacies as well as feminist analyses of cookbooks, this article illuminates CODEPINK’s efforts to teach readers how to critique military action, recruit peace-workers, build a movement, and bake pie.
- Journal
- Community Literacy Journal
- Published
- 2016-01-01
- DOI
- 10.25148/clj.10.2.009262
- CompPile
- Search in CompPile ↗
- Open Access
- OA PDF Gold
- Topics
- Export
- BibTeX RIS
Citation Context
Cited by in this index (0)
No articles in this index cite this work.
References (0)
No references on file for this article.
Related Articles
-
Reflections: A Journal of Community-Engaged Writing and Rhetoric Feb 2026Danielle Bacibianco
-
Written Communication Feb 2026Jonathan Marine; Jason Grant; Paul Rogers
-
College Composition and Communication Feb 2026Holly Hassel; Kate L. Pantelides
-
Written Communication Jan 2026The Contributions of Student-Level and Classroom-Level Factors for Australian Grade 2 Students’ Writing Performance ↗Anabela Malpique; Mustafa Asil; Deborah Pino-Pasternak; Debora Valcan
-
College Composition and Communication Dec 2025Black Women in the Control Room: Exploring the Sonic Literacies Development of a Hip Hop Audio Engineer ↗Christopher E. Castillo