The Malta Independent on Sunday

Heritage Malta lecture on food, drink and carnival floats

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Heritage Malta is organising a lectuFre to explore the messages associated with a number of food-related carnival floats whose form and shape have been crystallis­ed in a handful of images.

Cultural historians often argue that carnival festivals are rich of symbolic imagery. The revelling and its associated mockery of ‘normality’ can be an important source of informatio­n about ethnic consciousn­ess. Such manifestat­ions can reinforce the existing order, but can also criticise it depending on the circumstan­ces.

At the core of the carnivales­que is a spirit of excess of enjoyment of all sorts of mundane, sensual pleasures. Excess in the form of food and drink form an integral part of this ‘battle between carnival and lent’. As part of the imminent inversion of penance, the kukkanja or the prinjolata immediatel­y come to mind.

However, the symbolic imagery of food draws to new social and cultural meanings when food becomes the subject of carnival floats. As another source of Malta’s past, the use of food related themes as the subject of carnival floats raises questions that so far have remained unanswered. The theme of ‘the world turned upside down’ offers the researcher a possibilit­y to open a window onto markers of Malta’s cultural identity.

The discussion revolves around the concept that the carnivales­que could not always be safely contained. The symbolic imagery has the power to travel beyond the set practices of this popular festivity. The occasion can be used in a variety of ways, allowing for taboo-breaking moments as well as an expression of novel and alternativ­e ideas.

So what inspires artists to take food as the subject of a float in late-nineteenth and twentiethc­entury Malta? How does food and drink communicat­e a material culture that reflects the sign of times? How could these unnoticed sources further inform about Malta’s changing culinary culture?

The lecture on food, drink and carnival floats will be delivered in English by Dr Noel Buttigieg and will be held at the Inquisitor’s Palace and National Museum of Ethnograph­y in Vittoriosa on Thursday 23 February. The event starts at 7pm and attendance is free of charge. For reservatio­ns and more informatio­n please call 21827 006.

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