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Tuscaloosa, Ala. – The University of Alabama Libraries recently
received one of the largest collections of African-American cookbooks
in the country – some 450 volumes covering the period from
1827, when the first book with recipes by an African-American was
published, through the year 2000.
Known as the David Walker Lupton African-American Cookbook Collection
and housed in the Hoole
Special Collections Library, the collection offers a wealth
of information about the relationship between food and African-American
history and culture from the recipes of countless talented African-American
chefs who provided elegant cuisine in fine restaurants, hotels
and club cars to the advent of the soul food movement in the late
1960’s.
Dr. Louis Pitschmann, dean of libraries who helped bring the collection
to UA, is overseeing a public viewing of samples from the collection
through the end of February at the Gorgas
Library.
When David W. Lupton, a distant cousin of former UA President
Nathaniel Thomas Lupton, was considering a permanent home for his
collection, UA seemed to offer the ideal context both geographically
and institutionally. His widow, Dorothy R. Lupton, finalized the
arrangements for transferring the volumes last summer.
“The Lupton Collection is a significant addition to the
libraries’ resources for many reasons. First of all, the
collection is a treasure trove of rare and obscure books, many
of them not widely published, that too often pass ‘under
the radar’ of what libraries acquire,” said Dr. Clark
Center, curator of the Hoole Special Collections Library.
Dr. Amilcar Shabazz, director of the African-American studies
program said, “This collection will make possible the kind
of creative research in food and ethnic identity that has lately
become the focus of numerous university press publications.”
Culinary texts are written from the point of view of an individual
or a community and, as such, have much to say about ethnic identity,
family and community life, social history, the roles of women and
men, values, religion, and economics, as well as the more obvious
fields of diet and nutrition, use of agricultural products, the
food supply, and general food history.
Almost every title in the cookbook collection suggests more than
recipes: food is linked with music, humor, social satire (see the
underground classic, Vibration Cooking) cultural and religious
celebrations (several Kwanzaa cookbooks, for example) and almost
every aspect of life.
Examples from the collections include cook books and recipes by:
- Celebrities including Muhammad Ali, Pearl Bailey, Mahalia
Jackson, Patti LaBelle, and Oprah Winfrey among others
- George Washington Carver, famed educator and director of agriculture
at Alabama’s historic Tuskegee Institute and today’s
Tuskegee University
- Authors from New York to California and states in between;
the Caribbean, and Germany
- Church groups, sororities, health organizations, food industry
Please visit http://dialog.ua.edu/dialog20050124/cookbooks20050124.html,
where more detailed information about the collection can be found.
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