Lead Faculty of the Collaborative Specialization
University of Toronto Scarborough
Participating Degree Programs
Anthropology — MA, PhD
East Asian Studies — MA, PhD
Environmental Science — PhD
Geography — MA, MSc, PhD
History — MA, PhD
Information — MI
Medieval Studies — PhD
Museum Studies — MMSt
Nutritional Sciences — MSc, PhD
Public Health Sciences — PhD
Sociology — MA, PhD
Spanish — PhD
Supporting Unit
Culinaria Research Centre
Overview
Food Studies is an interdisciplinary field dedicated to understanding where our food comes from and how it shapes our bodies and identities. The production and consumption of food has gone through tremendous changes in the past few hundred years. Before industrialization, most food was grown in the place where it was eaten. With the rise of global commodity agriculture, it is often hard to find out exactly what our food is and where it comes from. Then, famine was a constant spectre, whereas today, over-eating has become a significant health problem.
Particular attention will be given to the material nature of food, the way it tastes and smells, and the changes it undergoes through natural decomposition and through the human intervention of preservation and cooking. Students will learn the importance of food in religion, society, the family, gender roles, the environment, agriculture, urbanization, immigration, colonialism, and race and ethnicity. Food Studies will leverage the University’s urban location and its proximity to Canada’s agricultural heartland to broaden students’ experience. The study of food provides both theoretical understanding and practical knowledge for professional careers in health care, business, government service, non-governmental organizations, and educational and community programs. This specialization will draw on a variety of disciplinary approaches emphasizing different knowledge and skills.
The collaborative specialization is open to master's and PhD students in the participating graduate programs listed above. Upon successful completion of the degree requirements of the participating home graduate unit and the collaborative specialization, students will receive the notation “Completed Collaborative Specialization in Food Studies” on their transcript.
Contact and Address
Web: www.utsc.utoronto.ca/culinaria
Email: culinaria.utsc@utoronto.ca
Telephone: (416) 208-8175
Collaborative Specialization in Food Studies
University of Toronto Scarborough
1265 Military Trail
Toronto, Ontario M1C 1A4
Canada