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1

Landheer-Cieslak, Christelle. "L’impact de la règle religieuse sur la disparition du lien conjugal en droit civil français et québécois." Revue générale de droit 37, no. 1 (October 28, 2014): 97–137. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1027131ar.

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En droit civil français et québécois, l’impact de la règle religieuse sur la disparition du lien conjugal est, à première vue, incertain : en France et au Québec, le mariage civil et les mariages religieux sont deux institutions désormais distinguées par la loi et par la jurisprudence. Cependant, l’impact de la règle religieuse sur la disparition du lien conjugal se manifeste dans certaines décisions relatives à la nullité du mariage et au prononcé du divorce. Dans ces décisions, la règle religieuse est reconnue pour les juges français et québécois de droit civil comme une règle juridique au statut particulier.
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2

Krajczyński, Jan. "Wpływ uzależnień na ważność małżeństwa kanonicznego." Prawo Kanoniczne 54, no. 1-2 (January 8, 2011): 191–216. http://dx.doi.org/10.21697/pk.2011.54.1-2.09.

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L’auteur aborde une question de l’influence des toxicomanies sur la validité de mariage canonique. Il fixe son attention sur l’alcoolisme. En analysant des sentences dans les causes de nullité de mariage ob alcoholismum, rendues par le Tribunal de la Rote Romaine après le 27 novembre 1983, il traite successivement des éléments suivants: l’exactitude des juges dans l’utilisation des termes relatifs aux conséquences de la consommation d’alcool, et la richesse des outils de langage par lesquels ils déterminent dans le cas particulier d’un problème d’alcool et son conséquence de droit; les symptômes de l’alcoolisme aigu et l’alcoolisme chronique, les chefs de nullité du mariage invoqués pour contester la validité du mariage ob alcoholismum, la démonstration dans les causes en déclaration de nullité de mariage ob alcoholismum.
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3

Cosnard, Henri-Daniel. "L'impuissance, cause de nullité de mariage." Revue Judiciaire de l'Ouest 10, no. 2 (1986): 181–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/juro.1986.1389.

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4

Cosnard, Henri-Daniel. "Nullité du mariage pour maladie mentale." Revue Judiciaire de l'Ouest 11, no. 3 (1987): 303–5. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/juro.1987.1514.

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5

Tardif, Anthony. "La nullité du mariage incestueux et les droits fondamentaux." Revue juridique de l'Ouest 30, no. 1 (2017): 91–100. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/juro.2017.4897.

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6

Payen, Françoise. "Consentement libre et nullité de mariage dans l'Église catholique." Dialogue 187, no. 1 (2010): 21. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/dia.187.0021.

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7

Rude-Antoine, Edwige. "Mariage forcé, violence physique, violence morale..., une réflexion à partir de jugements de nullité de mariage." Cliniques méditerranéennes 88, no. 2 (2013): 45. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/cm.088.0045.

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8

Richard, Stéphanie. "Sans naissance, pas de mariage ? Le procès en nullité du mariage de Louis XII et Jeanne de France (1498)." Questes, no. 27 (January 15, 2014): 47–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/questes.761.

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9

Kosowicz, Stanisław. "Zaburzenia psychiczne ograniczające wykonanie zobowiązań powziętych w akcie zgody małżeńskiej." Prawo Kanoniczne 29, no. 1-2 (June 5, 1986): 217–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.21697/10.21697/10.21697/pk.1986.29.1-2.06.

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In this article a problem of the psychical perturbations is done, which constrains executions of the obligations being included in the act of the matrimonial consent. The ability to live in community, a question of the bringing forth and education of the children, finally mutual perfecting themselves in the maried couple, there are esemtial elements of the sacramental mariage. If anyone of thees elements by the one of the parties contracting mariage is not realised, of the cause psychical disease, then it is possible to adjudicate the nullity of mariage. A difficulty to decide in these matters is, because it is not always easy to ascertain with full certitude, if the psichical disease effects a stagger of the spiritual counterpoise in such high degree that the person is not able to fulfill the obligations included in the act of the matrimonial consent The problem in this article brought up is now new one, but in this matter will be in time to come more and more decisions of Rota, which will be guide lines to adjudicate the causes for the lower instances in the analogical causes.
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10

Domingo, Joseph. "La prise en compte des enfants dans la procédure de nullité de mariage." L'Année canonique Tome LIX, no. 1 (January 1, 2018): 129–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/cano.059.0129.

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11

Jacobs, Ann. "Le droit de la défense dans le procès en déclaration de nullité de mariage." Revue théologique de Louvain 22, no. 1 (1991): 30–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/thlou.1991.2481.

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12

Heyberger, Bernard. "Cyrille Dounot, François Dussaubat (dir.), La réforme des nullités de mariage. Une étude critique." Archives de sciences sociales des religions, no. 188 (December 5, 2019): 310–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/assr.48829.

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13

Houbre, Gabrielle. "« Un individu d’un genre mal défini ». L’hermaphrodisme dans les procès en nullité de mariage (France, XIXe siècle)." Rue Descartes N° 95, no. 1 (2019): 80. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/rdes.095.0080.

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14

Lucereau, Bénédicte. "L’enfant confronté à la procédure de nullité du mariage de ses parents : quelques clés de lecture psychologique." L'Année canonique Tome LIX, no. 1 (January 1, 2018): 151–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/cano.059.0151.

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15

Beaulne, Jacques. "Critères de qualification des acquêts et des Family Assets en droit québécois et ontarien." Revue générale de droit 15, no. 3 (May 9, 2019): 537–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1059523ar.

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La nécessité de procéder au partage des biens des conjoints dont le régime matrimonial a été dissous par le divorce, la nullité du mariage ou la séparation, suppose l’étape préalable de détermination des différentes masses susceptibles d’une division quelconque. À ce chapitre, le juriste québécois a l’avantage d’avoir à sa portée les règles du Code civil qui établissent des critères fixes dont l’application permet de déterminer le caractère partageable ou non des patrimoines respectifs des époux. Par contre, le juriste ontarien n’a comme ressource que de rares règles écrites, largement complétées il est vrai par une abondante jurisprudence qui prône un système de qualification des patrimoines davantage relié au dynamisme perpétuel des masses. Pourtant, malgré ce cheminement divergent, les deux systèmes juridiques ont comme but ultime la reconnaissance de la situation d’égalité qui doit prévaloir entre les conjoints.
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16

Richard, Stéphanie. "Le couple, entre faits et droit : la nullité du mariage de René II de Lorraine et Jeanne d’Harcourt." Le Moyen Age CXXII, no. 3 (2016): 567. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/rma.223.0567.

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17

Toxé, Philippe. "La réforme des procès en nullité de mariage selon le motu proprio mitis iudex dominus iesus." L'Année canonique Tome LVI, no. 1 (January 1, 2014): 87–127. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/cano.056.0087.

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18

Houbre, Gabrielle. "Un corps sans sexe ? Un procès en nullité de mariage et un verdict confondants dans la France du XIXe siècle." Corps & Psychisme N° 69, no. 1 (2016): 133. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/cpsy2.069.0133.

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19

Gayda, Michel. "Les nouvelles dispositions pour la reconnaissance de nullité du mariage catholique selon le Droit Canon et le rôle de l’expertise psychiatrique." Annales Médico-psychologiques, revue psychiatrique 178, no. 2 (February 2020): 161–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.amp.2019.12.005.

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20

Murray, Molly. "The Prisoner, the Lover, and the Poet: The Devonshire Manuscript and Early Tudor Carcerality." Renaissance and Reformation 35, no. 1 (November 19, 2012): 17–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.33137/rr.v35i1.19073.

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Les nombreux bouleversements de la culture politique des Tudors durant les années 1530 ont transformé les pratiques d'emprisonnement en Angleterre. Le développement rapide des lois sur la trahison par Henri VIII, joint à son désir de censurer et de contrôler son élite politique par des condamnations de nullité de droits civils (act of attainder), a envoyé un grand nombre de membres de la noblesse — hommes et femmes — dans les prisons de l’État anglais. Cet article se penche sur les cas de deux prisonniers nobles, Sir Thomas Howard et Lady Margaret Douglas, qui ont été incarcérés à la tour de Londres suite à leur mariage secret en 1536 et considéré comme politiquement indésirable. Pendant leur captivité, Thomas et Margaret ont composé et échangé plusieurs poèmes lyriques, maintenant conservés dans le manuscrit nommé le Devonshire Manuscript (British Library Additional Manuscript 17492). On montre dans cet article que, dans leur présentation matérielle, ces poèmes offrent un témoignage concret de la remarquable vie sociale présente dans la prison Tudor, et dans laquelle des hommes et des femmes interagissaient verbalement autant que par écrit. Le contenu de ces poèmes, ainsi que leur style, nous transmettent l’expression de leur amour, mais aussi des commentaires tranchants sur les pratiques carcérales innovantes d’Henri VIII.
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21

Góralski, Wojciech. "Cornelia Seeger. Nullité du mariage, divorce et séparation de corps a Genève, au temps de Calvin. Fondements doctrinaux, loi et jurisprudence. Lausanne 1989 ss. 502." Ius Matrimoniale 4 (January 15, 1993): 135–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.21697/im.1993.1.1.18.

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22

Boyer, Jean-Jacques. "Quelques considérations autour de l’appel dans la procédure ordinaire du procès en déclaration de nullité du mariage après le motu proprio mitis iudex." L'Année canonique Tome LVI, no. 1 (January 1, 2014): 129–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/cano.056.0129.

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23

Douanla Tankeu, Clovis. "Fonction, prérogatives et importance processuelle du défenseur du lien dans la procédure en nullité de mariage depuis le motu proprio Mitis Iudex Dominus Iesus." L'Année canonique Tome LIX, no. 1 (January 1, 2018): 165–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/cano.059.0165.

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24

Claeyssens, Sabine, and François Escaffre. "Quarante ans de causes de nullité de mariage. Étude statistique sur l’activité des officialités d’Île-de-France jusqu’à la veille de la réforme de septembre 2015." L'Année canonique Tome LVI, no. 1 (January 1, 2014): 189–211. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/cano.056.0189.

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25

Claeyssens, Sabine, and François Escaffre. "Complément à l’étude « Quarante ans de causes de nullité de mariage. Étude statistique sur l’activité des officialités d’Île-de-France jusqu’à la veille de la réforme de septembre 2015 »." L'Année canonique Tome LVII, no. 1 (January 1, 2016): 91–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/cano.057.0091.

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26

Denkha, Ataa. "Gonçalves, Bruno (dir.), Comprendre la réforme des procédures de nullité de mariage selon le motu proprio Mitis Iudex Dominus Iesus. Colloque de la Faculté de Droit Canonique de l’Institut catholiqu." Revue des sciences religieuses, no. 94/2-4 (December 31, 2020): 427–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/rsr.9964.

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27

Robitaille, Lynda. "Le Défenseur du Lien Dans Les Causes de Nullité de Mariage. Étude Synoptique Entre Le Code et L’instruction «Dignitas Connubii», Fondée sur Les Travaux des Commissions Préparatoires de L’instruction by Philippe Hallein, Tesi Gregoriana." Jurist: Studies in Church Law and Ministry 71, no. 2 (2011): 472–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/jur.2011.0044.

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28

Tchouar, Djilali. "L’erreur, Cause De Nullité Du Mariage." المجلة المتوسطية للقانون والاقتصاد, 2019, 5. http://dx.doi.org/10.52247/2236-004-002-013.

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29

Gallegos, Danielle, and Felicity Newman. "What about the Women?" M/C Journal 2, no. 7 (October 1, 1999). http://dx.doi.org/10.5204/mcj.1798.

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Contemporary culinary discourse in Australia has been dominated by the notion that migration and the increased mobility of Australians is responsible for filling a culinary void, as though, because we have had no peasantry we have no affinity with either the land or its produce. This argument serves to alienate Australians of British descent and its validity is open to questioning. It's an argument in urgent need of debate because cuisine stands out as the signifier of a 'multicultural' nation. Despite all the political posturing, food has 'long been the acceptable face of multiculturalism' (Gunew 13). We argue that the rhetoric of multiculturalism serves to widen the chasm between Australians of British descent and other migrants by encouraging the 'us' and 'them' mentality. We have examined the common links in the food stories of three women from disparate backgrounds. The sample is small in quantitative terms but we felt that if the culinary histories of just three women ran counter to the dominant discourse, then they would provide a new point of departure. In doing this we hope to question the precept driving culinary discourse which gives more weight to what men have said and done, than what women have cooked and how; and propagates mythologies about the eating habits of 'ethnic' migrants. Multiculturalism The terminology surrounding policies that seek to manage difference and diversity is culturally loaded and tends to perpetuate binaries. "Multiculturalism, circulates in Australia as a series of discursive formations serving a variety of institutional interests" (Gunew 256). In Australia multicultural policy seeks to "manage our cultural diversity so that the social cohesion of our nation is preserved" (Advisory Council on Multicultural Affairs 4). The result is to allow diversity that is sanctioned and is to some extent homogenised, while difference is not understood and is contained (see Newman). Multicultural? Who does it include and exclude? Gunew points out that official formulations of multiculturalism exclude people of 'Anglo-Celtic' origin, as though they had no 'ethnicity'. Multiculturalism, while addressing some of the social problems of immigration, is propelled at government level by our need for national cultural policy (see Stratton and Ang). To have a national cultural policy you need, it would seem, a film industry, a music industry, and a cuisine. In his history of Australian cuisine, Symons has only briefly alluded to women's role in the development of Australia's 'industrial cuisine'. One Continuous Picnic presents an essentially masculinist history, a pessimistic derogatory view giving little value to domestic traditions passed from mother to daughter. Women are mentioned only as authors of cookbooks produced throughout the 19th century and as the housewives whose role in the 1950s changed due to the introduction of labour-saving devices. Scant reference is made to the pre-eminent icon of Australian rural culinary history, the Country Women's Association1 and their recipe books. These books have gone through numerous editions from the 1920s, but Symons refers to them dismissively as a 'plain text' arising from the 'store-shelf of processed ingredients' (Symons 201). What of the 'vegie' patch, the afternoon tea? These traditions are mentioned, but only in passing. The products of arduous and loving baking are belittled as 'pretty things'. Is this because they are too difficult to document or because they are women's business? Female writers Barbara Santich and Marion Halligan have both written on the importance of these traditions in the lives of Australian women. Symons's discourse concentrates on 'industrial cuisine', but who is to say that its imperatives were not transgressed. The available data derives from recipe books, sales figures and advertising, but we don't actually know how much food came from other sources. Did your grandmother keep chickens? Did your grandfather fish? Terra Australis Culinae Nullius2 Michael Symons's precept is: This is the only continent which has not supported an agrarian society ... . Our land missed that fertile period when agriculture and cooking were created. There has never been the creative interplay between society and the soil. Almost no food has ever been grown by the person who eats it, almost no food has been preserved in the home and indeed, very little preparation is now done by a family cook. This is the uncultivated continent. Our history is without peasants. (10, our emphasis) This notion of terra Australis culinae nullius is problematic on two levels. The use of the word indigenous implies both Aboriginal and British settler culinary tradition. This statement consequently denies both traditional Aboriginal knowledge and the British traditions. The importance of Aboriginal foodways, their modern exploitation and their impact on the future of Australian cuisine needs recognition, but the complexity of the issue places it beyond the bounds of this paper. Symons's view of peasantry is a romanticised one, and says less about food and more about nostalgia for a more permanent, less changing environment. Advertising of 'ethnic' food routinely exploits this nostalgia by appropriating the image of the cheerful peasant. These advertisements perpetuate the mythologies that link pastoral images with 'family values'. These myths, or what Barthes describes as 'cultural truths', hold that migrant families all have harmonious relationships, are benevolently patriarchal and they all sit down to eat together. 'Ethnic' families are at one with the land and use recipes made from fresher, more natural produce, that are handed down through the female line and have had the benefit of generations of culinary wisdom. (See Gallegos & Mansfield.) So are the culinary traditions of Australians of British descent so different from those of migrant families? Joan, born near her home in Cunderdin in the Western Australian wheatbelt, grew up on a farm in reasonably prosperous circumstances with her six siblings. After marrying, she remained in the Cunderdin area to continue farming. Giovanna was born in 1915 on a farm four kilometres outside Vasto, in the Italian region of Abruzzi. One of seven children, her father died when she was young and at the age of twenty, she came to Australia to marry a Vastese man 12 years her senior. Maria was born in Madeira in 1946, in a coastal village near the capital Funchal. Like Giovanna she is the fifth of seven children and arrived in Australia at the age of twenty to marry. We used the information elicited from these three women to scrutinise some of the mythology surrounding ethnic families. Myth 1: 'Ethnic' families all eat together. All three women said their families had eaten together in the past and it was Joan who commented that what was missing in Australia today was people sitting down together to share a meal. Joan's farming community all came in for an extended midday meal from necessity, as the horses needed to be rested. Both women described radio, television, increasing work hours and different shifts as responsible for the demise of the family meal. Commensality is one of the common boundary markers for all groups 'indicating a kind of equality, peership, and the promise of further kinship links stemming from the intimate acts of dining together' (Nash 11). It is not only migrant families who eat together, and the demise of the family meal is more widely felt. Myth 2: Recipes in 'ethnic' families are passed down from generation to generation. Handing recipes down from generation to generation is not limited to just 'ethnic' families. All three women describe learning to cook from their mothers. Giovanna and Maria had hands-on experiences at very young ages, cooking for the family out of necessity. Joan did not have to cook for her family but her mother still taught her basic cookery as well as the finer points. The fluidity of the mother-daughter identity is expressed and documented by the handing on of recipes. Joan's community thought the recipes important enough to document in a written form, and so the West Australian version of the CWA cookbook became a reality. Joan, when asked about why the CWA developed a cookbook, replied that they wanted to record the recipes that were all well tried by women who spent the bulk of their days in the kitchen, cooking. Being taught to cook, teaching your children to cook and passing on recipes crosses borders, and does not serve to create or maintain boundaries. Myth 3: 'Ethnic' food is never prepared from processed products but always from homegrown produce. During their childhoods the range of food items purchased by the families was remarkably similar for all three women. All described buying tinned fish, rice and sugar, while the range of items produced from what was grown reflected common practices for the use and preservation of fresh produce. The major difference was the items that were in abundance, so while Joan describes pickling meat in addition to preserving fruits, Maria talks about preserving fish and Giovanna vegetables. The traditions developed around what was available. Joan and her family grew the food that they ate, preserved the food in their own home, and the family cook did all the preparation. To suggest they did not have a creative interplay with the soil is suggesting that they were unskilled in making a harsh landscape profitable. Joan's family could afford to buy more food items than the other families. Given the choice both Giovanna's and Maria's families would have only been too eager to make their lives easier. For example, on special occasions when the choice was available Giovanna's family chose store-bought pasta. The perception of the freshness and tastiness of peasant cuisine and affinity with the land obscures the issue, which for much of the world is still quantity, not quality. It would seem that these women's stories have points of reference. All three women describe the sense of community food engendered. They all remember sharing and swapping recipes. This sense of community was expressed by the sharing of food -- regardless of how little there was or what it was. The legacy lives on, while no longer feeling obliged to provide an elaborate afternoon tea as she did in her married life, visitors to Joan's home arrive to the smell of freshly baked biscuits shared over a cup of tea or coffee. Giovanna is only too eager to share her Vastese cakes with a cup of espresso coffee, and as new acquaintances we are obliged to taste each of the five different varieties of cakes and take some home. Maria, on the other hand, offered instant coffee and store-bought biscuits; having worked outside the home all her life and being thirty years younger than the other women, is this perhaps the face of modernity? The widespread anticipation of the divisions between these women has more to do with power relationships and the politics of east, west, north, south than with the realities of everyday life. The development of a style of eating will depend on your knowledge both as an individual and as a collective, the ingredients that are available at any one time, the conditions under which food has to be grown, and your own history. For the newly-arrived Southern Europeans meat was consumed in higher quantities because its availability was restricted in their countries of origin, to eat meat regularly was to increase your status in society. Interest in 'ethnic' food and its hybridisation is a global phenomenon and the creolisation of eating has been described both in America (see Garbaccia) and in Britain (James 81). The current obsession with the 'ethnic' has more to do with nostalgia than tolerance. The interviews which were conducted highlight the similarities between three women from different backgrounds despite differences in age and socioeconomic status. Our cuisine is in the process of hybridisation, but let us not forget who is manipulating this process and the agendas under which it is encouraged. To lay claim that one tradition is wonderful, while the other either does not exist or has nothing to offer, perpetuates divisive binaries. By focussing on what these women have in common rather than their differences we begin to critically interrogate the "culinary binary". It is our intention to stimulate debate that we hope will eventually lead to the encouragement of difference rather than the futile pursuit of authenticity. Footnotes 1. The Country Women's Association is an organisation that began in Australia in the 1920s. It is still operational and has as one of its primary aims the improvement of the welfare and conditions of women and children, especially those living in the country. 2. The term terra australis nullius is used to describe Australia at the point of colonisation. The continent was regarded as "empty" because the native people had neither improved nor settled on the land. We have extended this concept to incorporate cuisine. This notion of emptiness has influenced readings of Australian history which overlook the indigenous population and their relationship with the land. References Advisory Council on Multicultural Affairs. Towards A National Agenda for a Multicultural Australia. Canberra, 1988. Barthes, Roland. Mythologies. Trans. A. Lavers. London: Vintage, 1993. Belasco, Warren. "Ethnic Fast Foods: The Corporate Melting Pot". Food and Foodways 2.1 (1987): 1-30. Gallegos, Danielle, and Alan Mansfield. "Eclectic Gastronomes or Conservative Eaters: What Does Advertising Say?" Nutrition Unplugged, Proceedings of the 16th Dietitians Association of Australia National Conference. Hobart: Dietitians Association of Australia, 1997. Gallegos, Danielle, and Alan Mansfield. "Screen Cuisine: The Pastes, Powders and Potions of the Mediterranean Diet". Celebrate Food, Proceedings of the 17th Dietitians Association of Australia National Conference. Sydney: Dietitians Association of Australia, 1998. Garbaccia, D.R. We Are What We Eat: Ethnic Food and the Making of Americans. Boston: Harvard UP, 1998. Gunew, Sneja. "Denaturalising Cultural Nationalisms; Multicultural Readings of 'Australia'." Nation and Narration. Ed. Homi Bhabha. London: Routledge, 1990. 245-66. Gunew, Sneja. Introduction. Feminism and the Politics of Difference. Eds. S. Gunew and A. Yeatman. Sydney: Allen and Unwin, 1993. xiii-xxv. Halligan, Marion. Eat My Words. Melbourne: Angus & Robertson, 1990. Harvey, D. The Condition of Postmodernity. Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1989. James, Alison. "How British Is British Food". Food, Health and Identity. Ed. P. Caplan. London: Routledge, 1997. 71-86. Mennell, Stephen. All Manners of Food: Eating and Taste in England and France from the Middle Ages to the Present. Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1996. Nash, Manning. The Cauldron of Ethnicity in the Modern World. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1989. Newman, Felicity. Didn't Your Mother Teach You Not to Talk with Your Mouth Full? Food, Families and Friction. Unpublished Masters Thesis, Murdoch University, Perth, Western Australia, 1997. Santich, Barbara. Looking for Flavour. Adelaide: Wakefield, 1996. Stratton, Jon, and Ien Ang. "Multicultural Imagined Communities: Cultural Difference and National Identity in Australia and the USA". Continuum 8.2 (1994): 124-58. Symons, Michael. One Continuous Picnic. Adelaide: Duck, 1992. Citation reference for this article MLA style: Danielle Gallegos, Felicity Newman. "What about the Women? Food, Migration and Mythology." M/C: A Journal of Media and Culture 2.7 (1999). [your date of access] <http://www.uq.edu.au/mc/9910/women.php>. Chicago style: Danielle Gallegos, Felicity Newman, "What about the Women? Food, Migration and Mythology," M/C: A Journal of Media and Culture 2, no. 7 (1999), <http://www.uq.edu.au/mc/9910/women.php> ([your date of access]). APA style: Danielle Gallegos, Felicity Newman. (1999) What about the women? Food, migration and mythology. M/C: A Journal of Media and Culture 2(7). <http://www.uq.edu.au/mc/9910/women.php> ([your date of access]).
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