Magazine articles, news items, and self-improvement books tell us that
our daily food choices – whether we opt for steak or vegetarian,
takeout or homemade, a TV dinner or a sit-down meal – serve as bold
statements about who we are as individuals. Acquired Tastes makes the
case that our food habits say more about where we come from and who we
would like to be. Eating preferences and habits never solely reflect
personal tastes. Drawing on interviews with parents and teens from
over one hundred families in urban and rural Canada, Brenda Beagan,
Gwen Chapman, and colleagues show that age, gender, social class,
ethnicity, health concerns, food availability, and political and moral
concerns shape the meanings that families attach to food and their
self-identities. They also influence how its members respond to social
discourses on health, beauty, and the environment. The intimate
portraits of family eating habits that grace this book challenge
existing beliefs about who determines what families eat (teens or
adults), the role of cosmopolitanism in high- and low-income
households, and the role that fat anxiety plays among teenage boys and
girls. By doing so, they cast doubt on the fundamental assumptions
that underlie many public health campaigns.
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Why Families Eat the Way They Do
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780774828598
Publisert
2021
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
University of British Columbia Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok