Upcoming work will focus on  cooking and eating as a historical phenomenon
By Elizabeth Hall ’10
Rebekah Pite, assistant professor of history, is currently  performing research for an upcoming book about 20th century Argentine  history that focuses on daily life in the domestic realm, primarily in  the areas of cooking and consumption.
For the project, she will be traveling to Argentina June 18-July 9 to  study in various libraries and archives across Buenos Aires.
At the center of Pite’s study is Argentina’s most influential  domestic leader and a national female figure, Dona Petrona C. de  Gandulfo (1896-1992).
“Dona Petrona rose to national prominence through her ubiquitous  cooking lessons in conference halls, print media, and radio and  television programs,” says Pite. “Her cookbook, El Libro de Dona  Petrona, first published in 1934, is still one of the three best  selling books in Argentine history.”
By tracing Dona Petrona’s career and comparing her changing  portrayals of domestic practices with Argentines’ actual experiences,  Pite uses cooking as a lens through which to view the dynamic  relationship between the national political economy and everyday life in  Argentina from 1928 to 1983. Pite believes that Dona Petrona’s success  during this economically uncertain period suggests that Argentina’s  process of modernizing was as much about female domesticity and  consumption as it was about the better known dynamics of male political  participation and industrialization.
“This narrative opens up a more dynamic understanding of women’s and  gender history not only in Argentina, but also across Latin America,”  she says. “While most Latin American labor histories that have included  women have focused on their experiences as factory workers, the majority  of Latin American women have worked in the home. Further, as my project  suggests that Dona Petrona and her cuisine came to represent  ‘Argentine-ness,’ this history broadens our understanding of the ways in  which ideas about national community develop through daily life.”
Pite has gained special access to Dona Petrona’s granddaughter’s  private archive, which includes cookbooks, her magazine clippings, radio  and television transcripts, conference pamphlets, manuscript recipes,  photographs, and unpublished memoirs. In addition, from 2002-2004, Pite  taped formal oral histories with over 80 Argentines during multiple  visits to Buenos Aires.
During the winter interim, Excel scholar Amalia Berardone ’09 (Buenos  Aires, Argentina) secured and photocopied a rare edition of all of  former Argentine first lady Eva Peron’s speeches. Over the summer,  Berardone, a history major, will read and summarize these speeches. This  research will help Pite to expand her analysis of Argentina’s two  leading ladies–Eva Peron and Dona Petrona–in light of one another.
Pite’s research in Buenos Aires this summer will focus on exploring  the concept of a “shared table” as a recurrent metaphor for national  belonging. She will be identifying concrete examples of people eating  together by analyzing images in the national archives and also searching  for family albums and domestic advice manuals at various bookstores and  markets. She will also conduct research on the legal and political  history of domestic service in Argentina, and observe the current  political and social climate of the country, which has recently elected  its first female president, Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner.
Pite believes this summer research will “help me bring new ideas and  energy to the classroom. I enjoy sharing sources, experiences, and  perspectives from the field with my students, whether in my surveys or  seminars of Latin American history or in more specialized courses on  Argentine history or food history. I hope to acquire some primary and  secondary sources at book stores and fairs that I will integrate both  into my scholarship and my classes.”
- Lafayette’s  Growing Exception Faculty
 
- EXCEL/Undergraduate  Research
 
- History