From cookbooks to ASMR: significance of sound and hearing in culinary recipes

Marzena Keating, Joanna Łapińska (Corresponding author)

Publications: Contribution to journalArticlePeer Reviewed

Abstract

Based on the contrastive analysis of selected recipes represented in various media, such as cookbooks, television culinary shows and ASMR videos, this article seeks to provide an overview of numerous roles, ranging from informative through performative to artistic-aesthetic, which sound plays in contexts of transmitting culinary knowledge and depicting culinary skills. In line with the findings of sound studies, phenomenology, and postphenomenology, the authors aim to present both the material dimension of sound, mainly brought to existence by the techniques and technologies used and its aesthetic-artistic dimension actualized in a performative act. In this article, it has been demonstrated, following Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s and Melissa Van Drie’s observations, that sensory experiences in culinary contexts are always intertwined, and “listening, like cooking, is multisensorial.” While this research draws primarily on the concepts developed within the field of sound studies, it is interdisciplinary in nature and can be situated within the academic fields of culinary history and food studies, history of everyday life, and philosophy of technology.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)317-328
Number of pages12
JournalThe Senses and Society
Volume18
Issue number3
Early online date2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2023

Austrian Fields of Science 2012

  • 604011 Film studies
  • 605004 Cultural studies
  • 508002 Audiovisual media
  • 508021 Media studies

Keywords

  • sound in recipes
  • ASMR
  • culinary TV shows
  • multisensuality
  • culinary history
  • postphenomenology
  • Sound Studies
  • sound studies
  • Sound in recipes

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