The King Invites: Performing Power at a Courtly Dining Table
This book was awarded the «Joop Witteveenprijs 2012».
In the aftermath of the French Revolution, the role of the monarchy in Western Europe was redefined. Together with the absolutist sovereigns, the historian’s interest in courts and court life in the nineteenth century seems to have vanished.
This book investigates what happened to the institution of the monarchy in the nineteenth century. More specifically, it examines whether the nineteenth-century Belgian monarchs can be described as influential, or even powerful. The volume also deals with another hiatus in history writing, namely food at nineteenth-century courts. The author addresses these two issues by examining the Belgian king and queen’s dinner guests, as well as the food that was served at the palace. She considers questions such as who was invited, who got to share a table, how did the guest lists evolve over time, was the food adjusted according to the guests and how did the food evolve?
A social network analysis of the dinner guests and a qualitative analysis of the court food are used as tools to tackle these questions. In this way, this book deals with issues that touch upon the very core of society’s development: power, hierarchies, status, imitation, segregation and distinction.
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The King Invites: Performing Power at a Courtly Dining Table
This book was awarded the «Joop Witteveenprijs 2012».
In the aftermath of the French Revolution, the role of the monarchy in Western Europe was redefined. Together with the absolutist sovereigns, the historian’s interest in courts and court life in the nineteenth century seems to have vanished.
This book investigates what happened to the institution of the monarchy in the nineteenth century. More specifically, it examines whether the nineteenth-century Belgian monarchs can be described as influential, or even powerful. The volume also deals with another hiatus in history writing, namely food at nineteenth-century courts. The author addresses these two issues by examining the Belgian king and queen’s dinner guests, as well as the food that was served at the palace. She considers questions such as who was invited, who got to share a table, how did the guest lists evolve over time, was the food adjusted according to the guests and how did the food evolve?
A social network analysis of the dinner guests and a qualitative analysis of the court food are used as tools to tackle these questions. In this way, this book deals with issues that touch upon the very core of society’s development: power, hierarchies, status, imitation, segregation and distinction.
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The King Invites: Performing Power at a Courtly Dining Table

The King Invites: Performing Power at a Courtly Dining Table

by Dani lle De Vooght
The King Invites: Performing Power at a Courtly Dining Table

The King Invites: Performing Power at a Courtly Dining Table

by Dani lle De Vooght

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$69.70 
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Overview

This book was awarded the «Joop Witteveenprijs 2012».
In the aftermath of the French Revolution, the role of the monarchy in Western Europe was redefined. Together with the absolutist sovereigns, the historian’s interest in courts and court life in the nineteenth century seems to have vanished.
This book investigates what happened to the institution of the monarchy in the nineteenth century. More specifically, it examines whether the nineteenth-century Belgian monarchs can be described as influential, or even powerful. The volume also deals with another hiatus in history writing, namely food at nineteenth-century courts. The author addresses these two issues by examining the Belgian king and queen’s dinner guests, as well as the food that was served at the palace. She considers questions such as who was invited, who got to share a table, how did the guest lists evolve over time, was the food adjusted according to the guests and how did the food evolve?
A social network analysis of the dinner guests and a qualitative analysis of the court food are used as tools to tackle these questions. In this way, this book deals with issues that touch upon the very core of society’s development: power, hierarchies, status, imitation, segregation and distinction.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9789052017525
Publisher: P.I.E-Peter Lang S.A., Editions Scientifiques Internationales
Publication date: 12/29/2011
Series: L'Europe alimentaire / European Food Issues / Europa alimentaria / L'Europa alimentare , #2
Pages: 285
Product dimensions: 5.80(w) x 8.60(h) x 0.70(d)

About the Author

Daniëlle De Vooght graduated from the History Department at the Vrije Universiteit Brussel in 2001. From January 2002 until November 2011, she was a researcher at that same department. She was awarded her PhD in History in April 2010, for a thesis that forms the basis of this book. She is a member of FOST, a research group on Social & Cultural Food Studies and recently published the edited volume Royal Taste: Food, Power and Status at the European Courts after 1789 (2011).

Table of Contents

Contents: The relationship between food and power – Courtly culture in the 19th century – The power of relationships.
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