Trouble with Snack Time

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A01=Jennifer Patico
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anxiety
Author_Jennifer Patico
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childhood
children’s food
children’s tastes
class
community
control
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discipline
diversity
engagement
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eq_society-politics
ethnography
helicopter parenting
inclusion
individualism
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neoliberal selfhood
neoliberalism
nutrition
nutritional ideologies
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parenting
post-industrial United States
postsocialism
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race
research ethics
risk society
school lunches
self-regulation
social change
softlaunch
sugar
United States

Product details

  • ISBN 9781479835331
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Sep 2020
  • Publisher: New York University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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Uncovers the class and race dimensions of the "cupcake wars"
In the wake of school-lunch reform debates, heated classroom cupcake wars, and concerns over childhood obesity, the diet of American children has become a “crisis” and the cause of much anxiety among parents.
Many food-conscious parents are well educated, progressive and white, and while they may explicitly value race and class diversity, they also worry about less educated or less well-off parents offering their children food that is unhealthy. Jennifer Patico embedded herself in an urban Atlanta charter school community, spending time at school events, after-school meetings, school lunchrooms, and private homes. Drawing on interviews and ethnographic observation, she details the dilemma for parents stuck between a commitment to social inclusion and a desire for control of their children’s eating. Ultimately, Patico argues that the attitudes of middle-class parents toward food reflect an underlying neoliberal capitalist ethic, in which their need to cultivate proper food consumption for their children can actually work to reinforce class privilege and exclusion.
Listening closely to adults' and children's food concerns, The Trouble with Snack Time explores those unintended effects and suggests how the "crisis" of children’s food might be reimagined toward different ends.

Jennifer Patico is Associate Professor of Anthropology at Georgia State University in Atlanta. She is the author of Consumption and Social Change in a Post-Soviet Middle Class.

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