Garlic Capital of the World: Gilroy, Garlic, and the Making of a Festive Foodscape

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Univ. Press of Mississippi, Feb 17, 2010 - Social Science - 212 pages
According to Pauline Adema, you smell Gilroy, California, before you see it. In Garlic Capital of the World, the folklorist and culinary anthropologist examines the role of food and festivals in creating a place brand or marketable identity. The author scrutinizes how Gilroy, California, successfully transformed a negative association with the pungent bulb into a highly successful tourism and marketing campaign.

This book explores how local initiatives led to an iconization of the humble product in Gilroy. The city, a well-established agricultural center and bedroom community south of San Francisco, rapidly built a place-brand identity based on its now-famous moniker, “Garlic Capital of the World.” To understand Gilroy's success in transforming a local crop into a tourist draw, Adema contrasts the development of this now-thriving festival with events surrounding the launch and demise of the PigFest in Coppell, Texas. Indeed, the Garlic Festival is so successful that the event is all that many people know about Gilroy.

Adema explores the creation and subsequent selling of foodscapes or food-themed place identities. This seemingly ubiquitous practice is readily visible across the country at festivals celebrating edibles like tomatoes, peaches, spinach, and even cauliflower. Food, Adema contends, is an attractive focus for image makers charged with community building and place differentiation. Not only is it good to eat; food can be a palatable and marketable symbol for a town or region.
 

Contents

Making a Foodscape Gilroy and the Iconization of Garlic
3
The Festivalization of Garlic Creating and Celebrating Community in Gilroy
24
From Foreign to Fad Garlics TwentiethCentury Transition
44
Garlic Galore Festival Inversion Subversion and the Enactment of Labor Relations
60
Place Branding and Selling Place Creating and Marketing Identity Capital
82
This little piggy went to PigFest The Paradox of PigFest
105
Festive Foodscapes Food Symbolization and Place Making
141
APPENDIX A
151
APPENDIX B
153
NOTES
155
BIBLIOGRAPHY
173
INDEX
191
Copyright

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About the author (2010)

Pauline Adema is staff folklorist for the Dutchess County Arts Council in Poughkeepsie, New York. She teaches at the Culinary Institute of America (Hyde Park, New York) and is a culinary anthropologist-consultant.

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