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Äcklig mat och (o)tacksamma repatriander : Mat, hygien, och normalitet i svenska flyktingläger 1945

Geschwind, Britta Zetterström LU (2022) In Budkavlen: Tidskrift för etnologi och folkloristik 101. p.11-37
Abstract
With a focus on food and disgust, this article examines the meeting between survivors who came to Sweden from Nazi concentration camps in 1945 so called “repatriates”, and the camp institutions that received them. The purpose is to examine the everyday negotiations and power relations of camp life through statements about food. The ways in which eating is linked to disgust illustrate the unequal and conditional relationship between "host" and "guest" and notions of the (un)grateful repatriate.

Eating is, like sexuality, an area surrounded by strong taboos, rules, and orderings. Regulations and rituals around food define and delimit religions, ethnic groups, national identities, classes, and genders. Food has moral, social and... (More)
With a focus on food and disgust, this article examines the meeting between survivors who came to Sweden from Nazi concentration camps in 1945 so called “repatriates”, and the camp institutions that received them. The purpose is to examine the everyday negotiations and power relations of camp life through statements about food. The ways in which eating is linked to disgust illustrate the unequal and conditional relationship between "host" and "guest" and notions of the (un)grateful repatriate.

Eating is, like sexuality, an area surrounded by strong taboos, rules, and orderings. Regulations and rituals around food define and delimit religions, ethnic groups, national identities, classes, and genders. Food has moral, social and political dimensions. A certain kind of food, eaten by a particular group in a certain context, is considered enjoyable, desirable, normal and healthy, or abominable, abnormal, or disgusting (Douglas 2011 [1966]). Food is also strongly associated with hospitality and the rituals of charity. In hospitality there is an inherent conditional power relationship between the host and its guest. This is particularly evident in relation to refugee reception. The guest must play according to the host's rules and be grateful to earn the hospitality. Some categories of guests are considered more "worthy", and in merit of greater empathy (Ahmed 2000, 2004). Exploring food and eating practices in refugee camps make this act of balance visible, the unequal power relations that arised in Swedish repatriate camps. As in the concentration camps, food involved a regulation of time and space and a manifestation of dependency. Eating was controlled: how, what and when they ate, and with whom. Institutions exercise power over the subject, whether the purpose is benevolent or malicious. This created disgust and resentment. Still, in contrast to much else, the food situation was something that the individual could resist, albeit limited. The study concerns both conditions in open camps and in a closed internment camp for "deviant" foreign women. (Less)
Abstract (Swedish)
Artikeln undersöker, med blicken fäst på mat och äckel, mötet mellan de överlevande som kom till Sverige från nazistiska koncentrationsläger 1945 och de lägerinstitutioner som tog emot dem. Syftet är att genom utsagor om mat undersöka lägerlivets vardagliga förhandlingar och maktrelationer. De sätt varpå ätande knutits till äckel åskådliggör den villkorade relationen mellan ”värd” och ”gäst” och föreställningar om den (o)tacksamma repatrianden. Från lägerinstitutionernas håll uttolkades deras förhållande till den mat de serverades i termer av hälsa och ohälsa, normalt och onormalt, tacksamhet och otacksamhet. De före detta koncentrationslägerfångarna i sin tur bedömde maten dels utifrån minnen av en normal vardagstillvaro i sina respektive... (More)
Artikeln undersöker, med blicken fäst på mat och äckel, mötet mellan de överlevande som kom till Sverige från nazistiska koncentrationsläger 1945 och de lägerinstitutioner som tog emot dem. Syftet är att genom utsagor om mat undersöka lägerlivets vardagliga förhandlingar och maktrelationer. De sätt varpå ätande knutits till äckel åskådliggör den villkorade relationen mellan ”värd” och ”gäst” och föreställningar om den (o)tacksamma repatrianden. Från lägerinstitutionernas håll uttolkades deras förhållande till den mat de serverades i termer av hälsa och ohälsa, normalt och onormalt, tacksamhet och otacksamhet. De före detta koncentrationslägerfångarna i sin tur bedömde maten dels utifrån minnen av en normal vardagstillvaro i sina respektive hemländer före kriget, dels utifrån plågsamma krigserfarenheter av mat och av bristen därpå. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
alternative title
Disgusting foods and (un)grateful repatriates : Food, hygien and normality in Swedish refugee camps 1945
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
repatriander, mat, äckel, gästfrihet, repatriates, food, disgust, hospitality
in
Budkavlen: Tidskrift för etnologi och folkloristik
volume
101
pages
27 pages
publisher
Institutet för folklivsforskning vid Åbo Akademi
ISSN
0302-2447
language
Swedish
LU publication?
yes
id
6a286e1c-7b35-4a17-a6c2-723a59916dfe
alternative location
https://journal.fi/budkavlen/article/view/117063
date added to LUP
2022-11-12 12:11:52
date last changed
2022-12-20 11:39:35
@article{6a286e1c-7b35-4a17-a6c2-723a59916dfe,
  abstract     = {{With a focus on food and disgust, this article examines the meeting between survivors who came to Sweden from Nazi concentration camps in 1945 so called “repatriates”, and the camp institutions that received them. The purpose is to examine the everyday negotiations and power relations of camp life through statements about food. The ways in which eating is linked to disgust illustrate the unequal and conditional relationship between "host" and "guest" and notions of the (un)grateful repatriate.<br/><br/>Eating is, like sexuality, an area surrounded by strong taboos, rules, and orderings. Regulations and rituals around food define and delimit religions, ethnic groups, national identities, classes, and genders. Food has moral, social and political dimensions. A certain kind of food, eaten by a particular group in a certain context, is considered enjoyable, desirable, normal and healthy, or abominable, abnormal, or disgusting (Douglas 2011 [1966]). Food is also strongly associated with hospitality and the rituals of charity. In hospitality there is an inherent conditional power relationship between the host and its guest. This is particularly evident in relation to refugee reception. The guest must play according to the host's rules and be grateful to earn the hospitality. Some categories of guests are considered more "worthy", and in merit of greater empathy (Ahmed 2000, 2004). Exploring food and eating practices in refugee camps make this act of balance visible, the unequal power relations that arised in Swedish repatriate camps. As in the concentration camps, food involved a regulation of time and space and a manifestation of dependency. Eating was controlled: how, what and when they ate, and with whom. Institutions exercise power over the subject, whether the purpose is benevolent or malicious. This created disgust and resentment.  Still, in contrast to much else, the food situation was something that the individual could resist, albeit limited. The study concerns both conditions in open camps and in a closed internment camp for "deviant" foreign women.}},
  author       = {{Geschwind, Britta Zetterström}},
  issn         = {{0302-2447}},
  keywords     = {{repatriander; mat; äckel; gästfrihet; repatriates; food; disgust; hospitality}},
  language     = {{swe}},
  month        = {{12}},
  pages        = {{11--37}},
  publisher    = {{Institutet för folklivsforskning vid Åbo Akademi}},
  series       = {{Budkavlen: Tidskrift för etnologi och folkloristik}},
  title        = {{Äcklig mat och (o)tacksamma repatriander : Mat, hygien, och normalitet i svenska flyktingläger 1945}},
  url          = {{https://journal.fi/budkavlen/article/view/117063}},
  volume       = {{101}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}