Film, adaptation and cooking with the recipes of julia child, julie powell and nora ephron

Main Article Content

Réka M. Cristian

Abstract

Réka M. Cristian discusses the topics of adaptation and cooking in Nora Ephron’s foodie film Julie and Julia based on Julia Child’s Mastering the Art of French Cooking that had a profound impact on several aspects of post-World War II American vernacular culture and Julie Powell’s novel Julie and Julia: 365 Days, 524 Recipes, 1 Tiny Apartment Kitchen which was based on the author’s blog documenting a year of cooking all Child’s recipes. The article focuses on the issue of intertextual dialogism and refunctioning as primary means of adaptation and also on the issue of microhistorical event(s) and stardom involved in the making of Ephron’s film.

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How to Cite
Cristian, Réka M. 2018. “Film, Adaptation and Cooking With the Recipes of Julia Child, Julie Powell and Nora Ephron”. AMERICANA E-Journal of American Studies in Hungary 14 (2). https://www.americanaejournal.hu/index.php/americanaejournal/article/view/45414.
Section
Essays
Author Biography

Réka M. Cristian

Réka M. Cristian is associate professor, chair of the American Studies Department, University of Szeged, co-chair and founding member of the university’s Inter-American Research Center. She is author of Cultural Vistas and Sites of Identity: Literature, Film and American Studies (2011), co-author with Zoltán Dragon of Encounters of the Filmic Kind: Guidebook to Film Theories (2008), and editor-in-chief of AMERICANA E-Journal of American Studies in Hungary, as well as its e-book division, AMERICANA eBooks. Email: cristian@lit.u-szeged.hu