The Oxford Symposium on Food and Cookery is an annual conference about food and cooking in Oxford. Wikipedia editing and training happens there and also at associated events at the British Library.
PURPOSE: Our group aims to improve and expand Wikipedia’s coverage of food related topics, especially but not exclusively those related to women. We are part of a broader effort led by Wikipedia to redress imbalances in its current content. We embrace the need to more generally address neglected personalities and topics as well as to correct popularly received falsehoods that are rife in a field that has only recently received serious scholarly attention. We welcome participants of all backgrounds and experience levels. Our hope is that by doing so every contributor, from expert to student, can not only learn why and how to contribute to Wikipedia but also initiate an important dialogue between all involved in an area of study that after long neglect has so prominently entered into popularity.
20 May 2019 | Wiki-Food and Mostly Women workshop at the British Library with new and experienced users: Lin9ster; ElisabethLuard; Doktorcris; Platdujour; Marieannebl; Toksyk; WriteAngled; AmandaRC; Efbsgpc; Sarahwordsfoodlife; ThePinkCook; Eggplant Eggnog; Injera Icedtea; Artichoke Applejuice; WGMack; Andrew Davidson; Yuitsum; RussellHistoryCook |
6 July 2018 | Oxford Food Symposium at St Catherine's College, Oxford. Etherpad |
23 May 2018 | Wiki-Food and Mostly Women at the British Library. Etherpad recorded the details. |
10 Nov 2017 | wikithon at the British Library |
07 Jul 2017 | wikithon at the Oxford Food Symposium |
28 Apr 2017 | wikithon at the British Library |
We ask that this entry fall under the umbrella of our mission to expand and improve Wikipedia’s food-related content, especially (but not exclusively) those about women. We interpret “food-related topics” in the broadest sense. We include wine, beer, coffee, tea, and other beverages; table-related objects (“material culture”); and dining institutions and traditions, from cafés to Tupperware parties, into our scope. We also encourage contributions that address women’s roles not only in cooking but also in transforming raw agricultural products into comestible form (for example, grinding corn into flour).