Food Practices and Social Inequality

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Brenda L. Beagan
Cassandra M. Johnson
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class-based dietary practices
Convenience Foods
cross-national food studies
cultural capital
Culture & Society
Diet Related Health Conditions
Elaine M. Power
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Ethical Eating
Eve Waltermaurer
Food
Food Acquisition
Food Acquisition Strategies
Food Deserts
food deserts analysis
Food Environment
Food Insecure Households
food insecurity
Food Practices
food sociology
Full Service Grocery Stores
Gwen E. Chapman
High Income Participants
High Income Shoppers
Intensive Mothering Expectations
Jennifer Smith Maguire
Joseph R. Sharkey
Kamini Maraj Grahame
Kathleen Tobin
Leonard Nevarez
Local Food Environment
Lotte Holm
Low Income Mothers
Low Income Participants
Low Income Rural Residents
Low Income Shoppers
Low Income Urban Households
Mexican Origin Residents
Micro-level Idealist
qualitative food research
Rosalie M. Rodriguez
Rural Food Environment
social class
social inequality
social stratification
Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program
Susan Bridle-Fitzpatrick
taste
Wei-ting Chen
Wesley R. Dean
White non-Hispanic Participants

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138104594
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Aug 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Policy-related, academic and populist accounts of the relationship between food and class tend to reproduce a dichotomy that privileges either middle-class discerning taste or working-class necessity. Taking a markedly different approach, this collection explores the classed cultures of food practices across the spectrum of social stratification. Eschewing assumptions about the tastes (or lack thereof) of low-income consumers, the authors call attention to the diverse, complex forms of critical creativity and cultural capital employed by individuals, families and communities in their attempts to acquire and prepare food that is both healthy and desirable. The collection includes research carried out in the United States, Canada, Mexico and Denmark, and covers diverse contexts, from the intense insecurity of food deserts to the relative security of social democratic states. Through quantitative and qualitative cross-class comparisons, and ethnographic accounts of low-income experiences and practices, the authors examine the ways in which food practices and preferences are inflected by social class (alone, and in combination with gender, ethnicity and urban/rural location). The collection underlines the simultaneous need for the development of a more nuanced, dynamic account of the tastes and cultural competences of socially disadvantaged groups, and for structural critiques of the gross inequalities in the degrees of freedom with which different individuals and groups engage in food practices. This book was originally published as a special issue of Food, Culture & Society.

Jennifer Smith Maguire is Associate Professor of Marketing in the School of Business at the University of Leicester, UK. Her research focuses on the construction of markets, tastes and value. Major areas of work include cultural intermediaries as taste makers, and the cultural production and consumption of provenance and authenticity as forms of value.