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dc.contributor.authorNiewiadomska-Flis, Urszula-
dc.date.accessioned2026-01-27T11:25:29Z-
dc.date.available2026-01-27T11:25:29Z-
dc.date.issued2025-
dc.identifier.citationCrossroads. A Journal of English Studies 51 (4/2025), pp. 103-117pl
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11320/19668-
dc.description.abstractAmerican food television has evolved from educational demonstrations in the 1940s to contemporary digital streaming programming in the twenty-first century. I trace this evolution through four key transformational periods: the foundational era of homemaker didactic instruction (1940s-1960s); Julia Child’s groundbreaking French Chef (1963), which combined education with entertainment; the cable television boom and the launch of Food Network (1990s), which focused on spectacle more than on instruction; and lastly, the digital streaming era (2000s-present), which is marked by prestige documentaries and inclusive content. By examining landmark programs from The French Chef to Chef’s Table and Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown, I intend to demonstrate how food television has matured from marginalized daytime programming into a sophisticated, multi-platform entertainment industry worth billions of dollars. In my analysis I discuss American politics of taste as reflected in food television programming through a few overarching concepts such as the obvious education-to-entertainment shift, “vicarious consumption,” constructing authenticity versus scripted reality, celebrity phenomenon, hybridization of food television programming, convergence of consumption (from literal/visual to economic/psychological), and democratization versus gatekeeping.pl
dc.language.isoenpl
dc.publisherThe University of Białystok, The Faculty of Philologypl
dc.rightsCreative Commons Attribution NonCommercial ShareAlike 4.0 International License-
dc.rights.urihttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/-
dc.subjectfood televisionpl
dc.subjectculinary mediapl
dc.subjectvicarious consumptionpl
dc.subjectcelebrity chefspl
dc.subjectdigital food culturepl
dc.subjectstreaming servicespl
dc.subjectThe French Chefpl
dc.subjectChef’s Tablepl
dc.subjectAnthony Bourdain: Parts Unknownpl
dc.titleFrom Instruction to Spectacle: The Seven-Decade Evolution of American Food Television Programmingpl
dc.typeArticlepl
dc.rights.holderCreative Commons Attribution NonCommercial ShareAlike 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)pl
dc.identifier.doi10.15290/CR.2025.51.4.08-
dc.description.Emailurszula.niewiadomska.flis@gmail.compl
dc.description.BiographicalnoteUrszula Niewiadomska-Flis holds a Doctorate and D.Litt. from the John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin, Poland, where she serves as Associate Professor in English Studies. Her scholarly interests focus on representations of foodways in literature and culture, southern studies, African American studies, and ethnic/immigrant literatures of the United States. She is the author of four monographs and numerous articles. Her monograph – Live and Let Di(n)e: Food and Race in the Texts of the American South (KUL Publishing House, 2017) – received “the 2018 American Studies Network Book Prize” from the American Studies Network (of the European Association for American Studies). Her subsequent monograph Race and Repast: Foodscapes in Twentieth-Century Southern Literature was published by the University of Arkansas Press (2022). She co-authored two monographs: Pathologizing Black Bodies: The Legacy of Plantation Slavery (Routledge, 2023), and Chicanas: Pisarki Amerykańskie Pochodzenia Meksykańskiego (the University of Warsaw Press, 2025). She edited volumes: Ex-Centric Souths: (Re)Imagining Southern Centers and Peripheries (Publicacions de la Universitat de València, 2019) and Dixie Matters: New Perspectives on Southern Femininities and Masculinities (KUL Publishing House, 2013). A co-edited volume, Food and American TV: Constructing Identity in Bite-Sized Narratives (with Carrie Helms Tippen), is forthcoming with Routledge (Spring 2026).pl
dc.description.AffiliationJohn Paul II Catholic University of Lublin, Polandpl
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dc.identifier.eissn2300-6250-
dc.description.issue51 (4/2025)pl
dc.description.firstpage103pl
dc.description.lastpage117pl
dc.identifier.citation2Crossroads. A Journal of English Studiespl
dc.identifier.orcid0000-0003-0840-6497-
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