Food as Communication- Communication as Food (häftad)
Format
Häftad (Paperback / softback)
Språk
Engelska
Antal sidor
465
Utgivningsdatum
2011-01-31
Upplaga
New ed
Förlag
Peter Lang Publishing Inc
Medarbetare
Cramer, Janet M. (ed.), Greene, Carlnita P. (ed.), Walters, Lynn M. (ed.)
Illustrationer
Black & white illustrations
Dimensioner
224 x 150 x 25 mm
Vikt
704 g
Antal komponenter
1
Komponenter
Paperback
ISBN
9781433109621

Food as Communication- Communication as Food

Häftad,  Engelska, 2011-01-31
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From high-tech kitchen gadgets and magazines to the Food Network, the last few decades have seen a huge rise in food-focused consumption, media, and culture. The discourses surrounding food range from media coverage of school lunchrooms and hunger issues, to news stories about urban gardening or buying organic products at the local farmers market. Food is no longer viewed merely as a means of survival. International and comprehensive in approach, this volume is the first book-length study of food from a communication perspective. Scholars examine and explore this emerging field to provide definitive and foundational examples of how food operates as a system of communication, and how communication theory and practices can be understood by considering food in this way. In doing so, the book serves to inspire future dialogues on the subject due to its vast array of ideas about food and its relationship to our communication practices.
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Food as Communication: Communication as Food is a wonderful introduction to this field of food studies research. These authors watched movies and television, examined package labels, visited exotic places, delved in wonderful libraries, and ate great food, and analyzed the meaning of these experiences for modern identity, culture, and politics. Anyone interested in what food can tell us about ourselves and our neighbors will want to read this book. (Marion Nestle, Professor of Nutrition, Food Studies, and Public Health at New York University, and author of Food Politics and What to Eat) Collectively, the manuscript is an assembly prism that disperses light, making transparent foods constitutional force and pervasive influence in most aspects of our daily lives. In addition to being well-organized and well-written, all of the chapters are amazingly free of academic jargon, which make them readily understandable. (Jane Ferry, Webster University) This fascinating collection of research articles walks the reader through history and space, the ages and the professions to get at the nitty-grittyness of this power [...] To make food visible, the authors rightly observe food in very specific ways as each tries to examine the meaning of the particular phenomenon under study making use of food as the communicator of that meaning. (Toni Liquori, School Food FOCUS, and Nutrition Program, Adjunct Full Professor, Teachers College Columbia University) Yum! Finally, a meaty volume for scholars and students interested in food and communication in a wide variety of contexts. Food as Communication offers many smart, accessible essays about our food discourses, recommending its use for courses in media and cultural studies, interpersonal/organizational/intercultural communication, and environmental studies alike. (Kathleen LeBesco, Co-editor, Edible Ideologies: Representing Food and Meaning, Professor of Communication Arts, Marymount Manhattan College) Cramer, Greene, and Walters have assembled an impressive volume that constitutes a map for the edible turn in environmental communication. Together, these essays reveal the power of food as a site of critical awareness, linking our daily biological needs to issues of language, media, identity and environmental policy. (Andy Opel, PhD, Associate Professor and Director, Media Production Program, Florida State University) This volume contributes significantly to Food Studies by clearly defining one disciplines potential for understanding the subject. In twenty-two chapters of international scope, it outlines theories and methods in the field of Communication and demonstrates how they are applicable to understanding food as social, cultural, political, and personal discourse. An excellent resource! (Lucy Long, PhD, Instructor, International Studies & American Culture Studies, University of Pennsylvania) Food as Communication: Communication as Food is a wonderful introduction to this field of food studies research. These authors watched movies and television, examined package labels, visited exotic places, delved in wonderful libraries, and ate great food, and analyzed the meaning of these experiences for modern identity, culture, and politics. Anyone interested in what food can tell us about ourselves and our neighbors will want to read this book. (Marion Nestle, Professor of Nutrition, Food Studies, and Public Health at New York University, and author of Food Politics and What to Eat) Collectively, the manuscript is an assembly prism that disperses light, making transparent foods constitutional force and pervasive influence in most aspects of our daily lives. In addition to being well-organized and well-written, all of the chapters are amazingly free of academic jargon, which make them readily understandable. (Jane Ferry, Webster University) This fascinating collection of research articles walks the re

Övrig information

Janet M. Cramer, PhD, is an Associate Professor in the Communication and Journalism Department at the University of New Mexico, where she teaches a variety of courses in media studies, journalism, and communication at the undergraduate and graduate level. Her research focuses on the cultural studies of media, including food, gender studies, and media history. She has written a history of media focusing on the cultural and intellectual traditions that have guided media development in the United States, titled Media/History/Society: A Cultural History of U.S. Media (2009). Carlnita P. Greene, PhD, is an assistant professor and Director of the Communication & Rhetoric program at Nazareth College of Rochester. Her research can be broadly defined as the intersection of rhetorical theory and popular culture. She has previously published on subjects as diverse as food culture and the media, identity and social style, rhetorical theory in the twenty-first century, and popular culture and pedagogy. Lynn M. Walters, M.S., is founder and Executive Director of Cooking with Kids, Inc., an award-winning non-profit organization that engages elementary school children in hands-on experience with fresh, affordable foods from diverse cultures. Her research interests focus on the behavioral effects of experiential learning with food; family, peer, and environmental influences on cooking and food choice; and the connections between pleasure and health.

Innehållsförteckning

Contents: Carlnita P. Greene/Janet M. Cramer: Beyond mere sustenance: Food as communication/Communication as food Laura A. Lindenfeld: Feasts for our eyes: Viewing films on food through new lenses Deborah Morrison Thomson: Play with your food: The performativity of online breakfast cereal marketing Defne Karaosmanoglu: Remembering past(s): The construction of cosmopolitan Istanbul through nostalgic flavors Adele Wessell/Andrew Jones: Faith-based homespace: Decoding good taste in a monastery Carlnita P. Greene: Competing identities at the table: Slow food, consumption, and the performance of social style Kristen Lucas/Patrice M. Buzzanell: Its the cheese: Collective memory of hard times during deindustrialization Kevin-Khristin Cosgriff-Hernndez/Amanda R. Martinez/Barbara F. Sharf/Joseph R. Sharkey: We still had to have tortillas: Negotiating health, culture, and change in the Mexican American diet Kathleen M. German: Memory, identity, and resistance: Recipes from the women of Theresienstadt Fabio Parasecoli: Looking at mens tables: Food and masculinities in blockbuster movies John R. Thompson: Dinner time discourse: Convenience foods and industrial society Vincent (Tzu-Wen) Cheng: A four-legged duck?: Chinese restaurant culture in the United States from a crosscultural/inter-cultural communication perspective Christie McCullen: The white farm imaginary: How one farmers market refetishizes the production of food and limits food politics Jessica Mudry: Quantifying the American Eater: USDA nutrition guidance and a language of numbers Barry Brummett: Hunting, gardening, and the original work of art: A homological analysis Michael S. Bruner/Jason D. Meek: A critical crisis rhetoric of seafood Anne Marie Todd: Eating the view: Environmental aesthetics, national identity, and food activism Janet M. Cramer: Discourses of consumption and sustainability on the Food Network Matthew Kaplan/Lynn James/Frances Alloway/Nancy Ellen Kiernan: Youth empowerment in family conversations and decision-making about food Marianne LeGreco: Mama thinks Im feeding you: Using food rules to restructure school meal programs Tara J. Schuwerk: Food bank culture: Food and nutrition communication in a hunger-relief organization Ross Singer: The corporate colonization of communication about global hunger: Development, biotechnology, and discursive closure in the Monsanto pledge Lynn M. Walters: High school students perceptions of environmental and communicative influences on eating behavior.