Dr. Oliver Wang & the Southern California Foodways Project Symposium

Southern California Foodways Project Symposium, October 11 and 12th, Autry Museum
 
The Southern California Foodways Project is devoted to studying, documenting and discussing the rich, diverse history of food cultures in the region. The idea for the Project took seed at a Boyle Heights restaurant in 2017, when a small group of people asked what we could collectively do to promote this mission. At the time, we were marveling at the exemplary work of the Southern Foodways Alliance which, for the past two decades, has been using symposiums, magazines, podcasts and more to explore how food is a powerful lens through which to view and explore the history, politics, economics of communities of the American South. “Couldn’t we do the same thing with food in Southern California?” we asked and two years later, here we are. 
 
The inaugural symposium is oriented around the theme of “a people’s history of Southern California foodways,” highlighting, in particular, the role that underrepresented indigenous, immigrant and other communities of color shape the past, present and future of food cultures in the region. 
 
On Friday evening, we invited Toni Tipton-Martin, author of the award-winning The Jemima Code: Two Centuries of African American Cookbooks and the forthcoming Jubilee: Recipes From Two Centuries of African American Cooking, to be in conversation with local food writer Tien Nguyen about Southern California food and storytelling. For Saturday, we have a slate of seven speakers spanning from Taco Maria chef Carlos Saldago to USC historian Natalia Molina to Los Angeles Times columnist Frank Shyong to screenwriter and BBQ chronicler Lolis Eric Elie offering their thoughts on the diverse histories of our foodways. On both days, we’ll be serving food that’s been curated by none other than Good Food’s Evan Kleiman and former Good Girl Dinette restauranteur Diep Tran. 
 
The goal is for this to be the first of a series of symposiums and similar events hosted by the Southern California Foodways Project, one that can eventually link the complex web of people and communities involved in our local food cultures – scholars, farmers, writers, restauranteurs, food justice advocates, etc.
 
For more information, contact: Dr. Oliver Wang
or: