Urban Foodways and Communication

Urban Foodways and Communication
Author: Casey Man Kong Lum,Marc de Ferrière le Vayer
Publsiher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 248
Release: 2016-05-19
Genre: Cooking
ISBN: 9781442266438

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Urban Foodways and Communication is a collection of ethnographic case studies that examine urban foodways around the world as forms of human communication and intangible cultural heritage.

Building Communities through Food

Building Communities through Food
Author: David F. Purnell
Publsiher: Lexington Books
Total Pages: 146
Release: 2019-06-28
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9781498558914

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Building Communities through Food: Strengthening Communication, Families, and Social Capital examines the power of food as a communicative tool to bring people of diverse backgrounds together. David F. Purnell argues that food enables people to look past their differences and focus on their similarities, thus creating a stronger sense of community via the sharing of a meal. The preparation, presentation, and ingredients of meals reflect a concrete representation of our individual identities and offer others an opportunity to share and take part in those identities. Scholars with an interest in family communication, interpersonal communication, and sociology will find this book especially useful.

Urban Food Culture

Urban Food Culture
Author: Cecilia Leong-Salobir
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 256
Release: 2019-04-02
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781137516916

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This book explores the food history of twentieth-century Sydney, Shanghai and Singapore within an Asian Pacific network of flux and flows. It engages with a range of historical perspectives on each city’s food and culinary histories, including colonial culinary legacies, restaurants, cafes, street food, market gardens, supermarkets and cookbooks, examining the exchange of goods and services and how the migration of people to the urban centres informed the social histories of the cities’ foodways in the contexts of culinary nationalism, ethnic identities and globalization. Considering the recent food history of the three cities and its complex narrative of empire, trade networks and migration patterns, this book discusses key aspects of each city’s cuisine in the twentieth century, examining the interwoven threads of colonialism and globalization. ​

The Cultural Politics of Food Taste and Identity

The Cultural Politics of Food  Taste  and Identity
Author: Steffan Igor Ayora-Diaz
Publsiher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 329
Release: 2021-04-08
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781350162747

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The Cultural Politics of Food, Taste, and Identity examines the social, cultural, and political processes that shape the experience of taste. The book positions flavor as involving all the senses, and describes the multiple ways in which taste becomes tied to local, translocal, glocal, and cosmopolitan politics of identity. Global case studies are included from Japan, China, India, Belize, Chile, Guatemala, the United States, France, Italy, Poland and Spain. Chapters examine local responses to industrialized food and the heritage industry, and look at how professional culinary practice has become foundational for local identities. The book also discusses the unfolding construction of “local taste” in the context of sociocultural developments, and addresses how cultural political divides are created between meat consumption and vegetarianism, innovation and tradition, heritage and social class, popular food and authenticity, and street and restaurant food. In addition, contributors discuss how different food products-such as kimchi, quinoa, and Soylent-have entered the international market of industrial and heritage foods, connecting different places and shaping taste and political identities.

Organizing Eating

Organizing Eating
Author: Sarah E. Dempsey
Publsiher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 246
Release: 2023-09-01
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9781000937626

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This book develops "organizing eating" as an organizational-communication centered framework for understanding how communication and power combine to actively shape eating and working in the U.S. food system. Drawing together established scholars, the book sheds light on how the interconnected aspects of power are communicative in nature, shaping and constraining the possibilities for organizing across the food system. The chapters provide grounded insight into the role of racism, corporate and state power, food cooperatives, urban farm systems, food policy, and labor practices, drawing attention to the pathways needed to pursue more equitable food systems. Providing readers with a set of useful critical conceptual tools and an understanding of communication frameworks, chapters identify common principles for critical organizing within the food movement and addresses the relevance of the COVID-19 pandemic and the national uprising against anti-Black violence for understanding the urgent possibilities of food justice. This cohesive collection of cutting-edge scholarship will be of interest to organizational communication scholars, critical/cultural communication scholars, environmental communication scholars, and health communication scholars; and the interdisciplinary fields of environmental studies, agriculture and food studies, and organization and labor studies.

The Tastes and Politics of Inter Cultural Food in Australia

The Tastes and Politics of Inter Cultural Food in Australia
Author: Dr. Sukhmani Khorana
Publsiher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 176
Release: 2018-03-13
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781786602206

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Using food-oriented case studies centred on Australian cities and media, this book argues for a processual understanding of cosmopolitanism that approaches everyday practices as a site of potentially ethical and/or reflexive inter-cultural exchanges.

Food and Communication

Food and Communication
Author: Mark McWilliams
Publsiher: Oxford Symposium
Total Pages: 399
Release: 2016-05-07
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781909248496

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The papers explored the use of food and cookery to explore the past and the exotic, and food in corporations.

Everybody Eats

Everybody Eats
Author: Marianne LeGreco,Niesha Douglas
Publsiher: Univ of California Press
Total Pages: 358
Release: 2021-08-31
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9780520314245

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Everybody Eats tells the story of food justice in Greensboro, North Carolina—a midsize city in the southern United States. The city's residents found themselves in the middle of conversations about food insecurity and justice when they reached the top of the Food Research and Action Center's list of major cities experiencing food hardship. Greensboro's local food communities chose to confront these high rates of food insecurity by engaging neighborhood voices, mobilizing creative resources at the community level, and sustaining conversations across the local food system. Within three years of reaching the peak of FRAC's list, Greensboro saw an 8 percent drop in its food hardship rate and moved from first to fourteenth in FRAC's list. Using eight case studies of food justice activism, from urban farms to mobile farmers markets, shared kitchens to food policy councils, Everybody Eats highlights the importance of communication—and communicating social justice specifically—in building the kinds of infrastructure needed to create secure and just food systems.