Food, Morals and Meaning

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A01=John Coveney
Ancient Greece
Ascetic Protestantism
Atwater's Work
Atwater’s Work
Australian Dietary Guidelines
Author_John Coveney
body image discourse
Category=JBCC4
Category=QDTQ
Children's Food Choices
Children’s Food Choices
choice
Chronic
Current Nutrition
Dietary Reform
discourse
doublet
empirico
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
food and power
Food Choice
Food Conduct
governmentality studies
Graeco Roman Period
health behaviour research
Infant Welfare
Infant Welfare Centres
modern
Modern Families
Modern Nutrition
moral panic in nutrition history
nutrition
Nutrition Discourse
Nutrition Knowledge
Nutrition Landscape
Nutrition Promotion
nutritional
Nutritional Science
Pester Power
Poor Law Board
Public Health Nutrition
Royal Australasian College
science
social determinants of diet
sociology of eating
subjects
Sydney University
transcendental

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415376204
  • Weight: 480g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 11 May 2006
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Following on from the success of the first edition, John Coveney traces our complex relationship with food and eating and our preoccupation with diet, self-discipline and food guilt. Using our current fascination with health and nutrition, he explores why our appetite for food pleasures makes us feel anxious. This up-to-date edition includes an examination of how our current obsession with body size, especially fatness, drives a national and international panic about the obesity ‘epidemic’.

Focusing on how our food anxieties have stemmed from social, political and religious problems in Western history, Food, Morals and Meaning looks at:

  • the ancient Greeks’ preoccupation with eating
  • early Christianity and the conflict between the pleasures of the flesh and spirituality
  • scientific developments in eighteenth and nineteenth century Europe and our current knowledge of food
  • the social organization of food in the modern home, based on real interviews
  • the obesity ‘epidemic’ and its association with moral degeneration.

Based on the work of Michel Foucault, this fresh and updated edition explains how a rationalization food choice – so apparent in current programmes on nutrition and health – can be traced through a genealogy of historical social imperatives and moral panics. Food, Morals and Meaning is essential reading for those studying nutrition, public health, sociology of health and illness and sociology of the body.

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