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Maintaining Traditions: Food and Identity among Early Immigrants to Upper Canada
by
Tourigny, Eric D.
in
Archaeological evidence
/ Archaeology
/ Food
/ Identity
/ Immigrants
/ Meat
/ Migrants
/ Original
/ Original Article
/ Regions
/ Settlers
/ Social Sciences
/ Traditions
/ Working class
2020
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Maintaining Traditions: Food and Identity among Early Immigrants to Upper Canada
by
Tourigny, Eric D.
in
Archaeological evidence
/ Archaeology
/ Food
/ Identity
/ Immigrants
/ Meat
/ Migrants
/ Original
/ Original Article
/ Regions
/ Settlers
/ Social Sciences
/ Traditions
/ Working class
2020
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Maintaining Traditions: Food and Identity among Early Immigrants to Upper Canada
Journal Article
Maintaining Traditions: Food and Identity among Early Immigrants to Upper Canada
2020
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Overview
A critical examination of the relationships between food and identity is explored among early British and American Loyalist settlers in Upper Canada (southern Ontario) from the late 18th to the late 19th centuries. This research synthesizes zooarchaeological data from the region and interprets these alongside historical texts to address how meat was incorporated into early immigrant diets. Previous scholarship generally agreed that pork played a dominant role in Upper Canadian cuisine and that residents first settling in the area were particularly reliant on wild meat resources. Archaeological evidence suggests this was not the case. Results and discussions highlight the influence of British working-class traditions on Upper Canadian identities and the development of regional cuisines in southern Ontario. Parallels are drawn to anthropological and sociological studies of migrant foodways, encouraging archaeologists to consider the importance of maintaining food traditions when examining early immigrant assemblages.
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