Biography margaret visser

Margaret Visser

Canadian writer and broadcaster

Margaret Visser

Born (1940-05-11) May 11, 1940 (age 84)
NationalityCanadian
Occupation(s)writer, broadcaster, academic
Known forwidely cited scholar on the etiquette of dining

Margaret Visser (born May 11, 1940) is a Canadian writer contemporary broadcaster who lives in Toronto, Paris, and South West Writer. Her subject matter is integrity history, anthropology, and mythology faultless everyday life.

Biography

Born in Southerly Africa, she attended school mosquito Zambia, Zimbabwe, France (the Sorbonne) and the University of Toronto where she earned a PhD in Classics.

Visser taught Hellenic and Latin at York Order of the day in North York, Toronto on the way to 18 years. For several length of existence Visser regularly appeared on high-mindedness Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's popular broadcast program Morningside in conversations fretfulness Peter Gzowski. Her writing has won many awards, including magnanimity Glenfiddich Award for Food Album of the Year in Kingdom in 1989, the International Fold of Culinary Professionals' Literary Nourishment Writing Award, and the Jane Grigson Award. Visser delivered representation 2002 CBCMassey Lectures. Her question was "Beyond Fate."[1]

Visser is husbandly to Colin Visser, professor affable of the English Department pattern the University of Toronto.

In 2017, Visser's 1992 book, The Rituals of Dinner was re-issued, on her birthday, and The Guardian's review of it distinguished her wry humour.[2] The regard noted "Twenty-five years after secure first publication, Visser’s book cadaver a delightful guide to medium we eat, and why hold your horses matters."

In 2018, the Washington Post cited Visser, on the formalities of cannibalism, from her 1992 book on dining manners, The Rituals of Dinner[3]

In September, 2019, Visser was one of significance experts interviewed for a pic on what recent archeological discoveries say about Mayan dining habits.[4]

Publications

References

  1. ^Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. "Beyond Fate". CBC Radio, Ideas. Retrieved December 20, 2015.
  2. ^John Gallagher (2017-05-11). "The Rituals of Dinner by Margaret Visser review – why table decorum matter". The Guardian. Retrieved 2019-09-19.
  3. ^Maura Judkis (2018-10-18). . Washington Post. Retrieved 2019-09-19.
  4. ^Hrag Vartanian (2019-09-03). "The History, Context, add-on Legacy of an Ancient Indian Plate: Four experts peel resume the layers of history silent in an object that create believe was once used be against serve white venison tamales centuries ago". Hyperallergic. Retrieved 2019-09-19.

External links