The ‘family cookbook’ created for the ambient kitchen (Olivier, P. et al, 2009) at Newcastle Culture
Lab in 2008 a design object that mutates and evolves according to the
activities of the user of the kitchen. This led to the creation of individual
family cookbooks for potential users to log and narrate family narratives
through recipes and kitchen stories. This illustrated for me how the combined
activities of telling stories and physical making might provide a vehicle for
exploring how social interactions, bonding and individual identities are
formed, create and perpetuate cultural traditions and memory.
The cookbook in Greek tradition is
an object that is often inherited from one’s mother when starting a new family,
a cultural signifier of the emotional and social importance attached to
preparing food, eating and gathering around the table in maintaining a happy
family. As in many cultures, family recipes are symbolic objects closely
connected with place and time echoing histories and revealing roots. Thus the
‘family cookbook’ design aimed to provide.
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