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Gender and Food
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Volume 22 explores the complex relationships between gender and food in a variety of locations and time periods using a range of research methods. Gender inequality as it affects the struggle for ...
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02 September 2016

Volume 22 explores the complex relationships between gender and food in a variety of locations and time periods using a range of research methods. Authors show that gender inequality and men’s dominance are implicit or explicit, and that in times of both stability and change, the burden of many if not most aspects of food production and provisioning falls upon women and is an integral part of the care work they perform. Food is shown to be related to societal structures of power, resources and labor markets, as well as households, bodies and emotions. Health, well-being and sustainability emerge as major tropes in the economic and geographic north and south from the arctic to the equator and places between. Western cultural trends regarding specialized diets as they relate to health and illness are examined from a gender lens as is children’s nutrition worldwide. Gender inequality as it affects the struggle for access to land, the affordability of food, and its nutritional value is identified as a major social policy issue.
Price: $187.99
Pages: 328
Publisher: Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Imprint: Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Series: Advances in Gender Research
Publication Date:
02 September 2016
ISBN: 9781786350541
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:
SOCIAL SCIENCE / Gender Studies, Gender studies: women & girls
Editors Segal and Demos present readers with a collection of academic essays and scholarly articles focused on the relationship between food and gender explored in different contexts utilizing a variety of research methods. The essays are grouped in three parts devoted to gender, food, and social change; eating in sickness and in health; and the preparation and serving of food. Marcia Texler Segal is a faculty member of Indiana University Southeast. Vasilikie Demos is a faculty member of the University of Minnesota, Morris.
Edited by Marcia Texler Segal, School of Social Science, Indiana University Southeast, New Albany, IN, USA
Vasilikie Demos, Division of the Social Sciences, University of Minnesota, Morris, MN, USA
Introduction to Gender and Food: From Production to Consumption and After - Vasilikie Demos and Marcia Texler Segal
PART I: GENDER, FOOD AND SOCIAL CHANGE
Food Trends Through Two Generations Among Saami in Arctic Fennoscandia - Myrdene Anderson
Three Sisters from the Outer Boroughs: Class, Reproduction, and Food in the Early 1940s Through the Mid-1950s - Roberta Spalter-Roth
Traditional Provisioning Responsibilities of Women in Northern Ghana - Eileen Bogweh Nchanji and Imogen Bellwood-Howard
Access to Opportunity: A Case Study of Street Food Vendors in Ghana’s Urban Informal Economy - Arianna King
PART II: EATING IN SICKNESS AND IN HEALTH
From Unhealthy Satiety to Health-oriented Eating: Narratives of the Mediterranean Diet, Managing a Chronic Illness - Franca Bimbi
Empowering Women, Strengthening Children: a Multi-Level Analysis of Gender Inequality and Child Malnutrition in Developing Countries - Rebekah Burroway
Gluten-Free Eating and Gendered Feeding Work in Families Affected by Celiac Disease - Denise A. Copelton
Women’s Income and Healthy Eating Perception - Antonella Samoggia, Aldo Bertazzoli, Vaiva Hendrixson, Maria Glibetic and Anne Arvola
Emotional Labor, Food Provisioning and Local Food System Engagement - Rebecca L. Som Castellano
PART III: FOOD: PREPARING AND SERVING IT
The Culinary “Food Chain”: Private and Personal Chefs Negotiate Identity and Status in the Culinary Profession - Alexandra Hendley
The Physical and Emotional Contours of Feeding Labor by School Food Service Employees - Ashley D. Vancil-Leap
Subversive Cooking in Liberal Feminism, 1963-1985 - Stacy J. Williams