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Böcker i Critical Food Studies-serien

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  •  
    650,-

    This collection critically examines the role of food programming on European early television and the impact this might have had on food habits and identities for the European audiences. It foregrounds various food programme genres, from travelog, cooking show and TV cooking competition, to more artistic forms.

  • av Silvia Bottinelli
    1 986,-

    Artists and the Practice of Agriculture maps out examples of artistic practices that engage with the aesthetics and politics of gathering food, growing edible and medicinal plants, and interacting with non-human collaborators.

  • av Cristina Hanganu-Bresch
    1 696,-

    This book explores themes in the rhetoric of vegetarian discourse. A vegan practice may help mitigate crises such as climate change, global health challenges, and sharpening socioeconomic disparities, by ensuring both fairness in the treatment of animals and food justice for marginalized populations.

  • av Paulo Andre Niederle & Valdemar Joao Wesz
    650 - 1 986,-

  • av Alissa Overend
    560 - 1 166,-

  • - Impact on Postwar Foodways
     
    1 976,-

    This collection critically examines the role of food programming on European early television and the impact this might have had on food habits and identities for the European audiences. It foregrounds various food programme genres, from travelog, cooking show and TV cooking competition, to more artistic forms.

  • av Bethaney Turner
    650 - 1 980,-

  • - Searching for Community Empowerment and Food Security in Food Access Programs
    av Adam M. Pine
    596 - 2 186,-

  • - A History of Milk, Science and the Law
    av Peter Atkins
    790 - 1 970,-

    As a food, milk has been revered and ignored, respected and feared. In the face of its 'material resistance', attempts were made to purify it of dirt and disease, and to standardize its fat content. This title tells the history of the struggle to bring milk under control, and, as a result, to redraw the boundaries between nature and society.

  • - Social Movements, Local Economies, Collaborative Networks
     
    1 890,-

    This book examines the role of local food movements, enterprises and networks in the transformation of the currently unsustainable global food system. It explores a series of innovations designed to re-integrate sustainable modes of food production and encourage food sovereignty.

  • - Wine, Ethics and Development
    av UK) Herman & Agatha (Cardiff University
    650 - 1 976,-

  • - Politics, Economy and Culture
    av Harvey Neo & Jody Emel
    650 - 1 976,-

  • av Professor Michael S. Carolan
    800 - 2 120,-

    While the phenomenon of embodied knowledge is becoming integrated into the social sciences, critical geography, and feminist research agendas it continues to be largely ignored by agro-food scholars. This book helps fill this void by inserting into the food literature living, feeling, and sensing bodies.

  •  
    1 756,-

    This book explores the interrelations between food, technology and knowledge-sharing practices in producing digital food cultures.

  •  
    506,-

    This book explores the interrelations between food, technology and knowledge-sharing practices in producing digital food cultures.

  • - A Matter of Justice, Sovereignty, and Survival
     
    1 890,-

    This book explores the experiences, causes, and consequences of food insecurity in different geographical regions and historical eras. It highlights collective action and political action aimed at food sovereignty as solutions to mitigate suffering.

  •  
    730,-

    In recent years everyone from politicians to celebrity chefs has been proselytizing about how we should grow, buy, prepare, present, cook, taste, eat and dispose of food. In light of this, contributors to this book argue that food has become the target of intensified pedagogical activity across a range of domains, including schools, supermarkets, families, advertising and TV media. Illustrated with a range of empirical studies, this edited and interdisciplinary volume - the first book on food pedagogies - develops innovative and theoretical perspectives to problematize the practices of teaching and learning about food. While many different pedagogues - policy makers, churches, activists, health educators, schools, tourist agencies, chefs - think we do not know enough about food and what to do with it, the aims, effects and politics of these pedagogies has been much less studied. Drawing on a range of international studies, diverse contexts, genres and different methods, this book provides new sites of investigation and lines of inquiry. As a result of its broad ranging critical evaluation of ΓÇÖfood as classroomΓÇÖ and ΓÇÖfood as teacherΓÇÖ, it provides theoretical resources for opening up the concept of pedagogy, and assessing the moralities and politics of teaching and learning about food in the classroom and beyond.

  • - Practices, Distinctions and Heterotopias
     
    730,-

  • - From the Margins to the Mainstream
     
    2 036,-

    Media interest in food has intensified in recent years, leading to a contemporary food landscape where ''alternative'' food practices are increasingly visible. Concerns that were once exclusively the domain of activist movements motivated by environmental, animal rights, health and anti-corporate agendas are now central to primetime television cooking shows, mobile apps and social media. This book is the first to explore the impact of popular media and culture on contemporary food politics. Through examination of a range of media and cultural texts, including news, digital media, advertising and food labelling, it brings together leading and emerging scholars in food studies, media and communications, sociology, law, policy studies, business, and geography. The book explores the practices of alternative food movements, the marketing techniques of conventional and alternative food producers, and the relationships between food industries, media, and the public. Covering topics ranging from agtech start-ups and social justice projects, to new ways of mediating food waste, celebrity, and ''ethical'' foods, Alternative Food Politics reveals the importance of media as a driver of food system transformation. This is a pivotal time for media and food industries, and this book is essential reading for scholars and students seeking to better understand the futures, possibilities and limits of food politics today.  

  • - The Second Great Transformation
    av Gilles (Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique Allaire & Benoit (Centre de Cooperation Internationale en Recherche Agronomique pour le Developpement (CIRAD) Daviron
    2 090,-

  • - Contemporary Encounters between Foods and Bodies
     
    800,-

    Why We Eat, How We Eat maps new terrains in thinking about relations between bodies and foods. With the central premise that food is both symbolic and material, the volume explores the intersections of current critical debates regarding how individuals eat and why they eat. Through a wide-ranging series of case studies it examines how foods and bodies both haphazardly encounter, and actively engage with, one another in ways that are simultaneously material, social, and political. The aim and uniqueness of this volume is therefore the creation of a multidisciplinary dialogue through which to produce new understandings of these encounters that may be invisible to more established paradigms. In so doing, Why We Eat, How We Eat concomitantly employs eating as a tool - a novel way of looking - while also drawing attention to the term ''eating'' itself, and to the multiple ways in which it can be constituted. The volume asks what eating is - what it performs and silences, what it produces and destroys, and what it makes present and absent. It thereby traces the webs of relations and multiple scales in which eating bodies are entangled; in diverse and innovative ways, contributors demonstrate that eating draws into relationships people, places and objects that may never tangibly meet, and show how these relations are made and unmade with every mouthful. By illuminating these contemporary encounters, Why We Eat, How We Eat offers an empirically grounded richness that extends previous approaches to foods and bodies.

  •  
    766,-

    Critically reflecting on the interplays between food and care, this multidisciplinary volume asks ΓÇÖwhy do individuals, institutions and agencies care about what other people eat?ΓÇÖ It explores how acts of caring about food and eating shape and intervene in individual bodies as well as being enacted in and through those bodies. In so doing, the volume extends current critical debates regarding food and care as political mechanisms through which social hierarchies are constructed and both self and ''other'' (re)produced. Addressing the ways in which eating and caring interact on multiple scales and sites - from public health and clinical settings to the market, the home and online communities - Careful Eating asks what ΓÇÖeatingΓÇÖ and ΓÇÖcaringΓÇÖ are, what relationships they create and rupture, and how their interplay is experienced in myriad spaces of everyday life. Taking account of this two-directional flow of engagement between eating and caring, the chapters are organized into three central theoretical dimensions: how eating practices mobilize discourses and forms of care; how discourses and practices of care (look to) shape particular forms of eating and food preferences; and how it is often in the bodies of individual consumers that eating and care encounter one another.

  • - Critical Approaches to Diet and Dietary Intervention
     
    846,-

    ''Hegemonic nutrition'' is produced and proliferated by a wide variety of social institutions such as mainstream nutrition science, clinical nutrition as well as those less classically linked such as life science/agro-food companies, the media, family, education, religion and the law. The collective result is an approach to and practice of nutrition that alleges not only one single, clear-cut and consented-upon set of rules for ''healthy eating,'' but also tacit criteria for determining individual fault, usually some combination of lack of education, motivation, and unwillingness to comply. Offering a collection of critical, interdisciplinary replies and responses to the matter of ''hegemonic nutrition'' this book presents contributions from a wide variety of perspectives; nutrition professionals and lay people, academics and activists, adults and youth, indigenous, Chicana/o, Latina/o, Environmentalist, Feminist and more. The critical commentary collectively asks for a different, more attentive, and more holistic practice of nutrition. Most importantly, this volume demonstrates how this ''new'' nutrition is actually already being performed in small ways across the American continent. In doing so, the volume empowers diverse knowledges, histories, and practices of nutrition that have been marginalized, re-casts the objectives of dietary intervention, and most broadly, attempts to revolutionize the way that nutrition is done.

  • - Making Sense of Contemporary Food Politics
     
    790,-

    Reconnecting so-called alternative food geographies back to the mainstream food system - especially in light of the discursive and material ''transgressions'' currently happening between alternative and conventional food networks, this volume critically interrogates and evaluates what stands for ''food politics'' in these spaces of transgression now and in the near future and addresses questions such as: What constitutes ''alternative'' food politics specifically and food politics more generally when organic and other ''quality'' foods have become mainstreamed? What has been the contribution so far of an ''alternative food movement'' and its potential to leverage further progressive change and/or make further inroads into conventional systems? What are the empirical and theoretical bases for understanding the established and growing ''transgressions'' between conventional and alternative food networks? Offering a better understanding of the evolving position of the corporate food system vis a vis alternative food networks, this book considers the prospects for economic, social, cultural and material transformations led by an increasingly powerful and legitimated alternative food network.

  •  
    1 830,-

    Critically reflecting on the interplays between food and care, this multidisciplinary volume asks ¿why do individuals, institutions and agencies care about what other people eat?¿ It explores how acts of caring about food and eating shape and intervene in individual bodies as well as being enacted in and through those bodies. Careful Eating asks what ¿eating¿ and ¿caring¿ are, what relationships they create and rupture, and how their interplay is experienced in myriad spaces of everyday life.

  • - Practices, Distinctions and Heterotopias
     
    2 126,-

    Food is everywhere in contemporary mediascapes, as witnessed by the increase in cookbooks, food magazines, television cookery shows, online blogs, recipes, news items and social media posts about food. This volume argues that contemporary food studies needs to pay more attention to the significance of media in relation to how we 'do' food.

  •  
    1 830,-

    In recent years everyone from politicians to celebrity chefs has been proselytizing about how we should grow, buy, prepare, present, cook, taste, eat and dispose of food. This book argue that food has become the target of intensified pedagogical activity across a range of domains, including schools, supermarkets, advertising and TV media. Illustrated with a range of empirical studies, this interdisciplinary book develops innovative and theoretical perspectives to problematize the practices of teaching and learning about food. It provides theoretical resources for opening up the concept of pedagogy, assessing the moralities and politics of food education in the classroom and beyond.

  • - Fields, Bodies, Markets
     
    2 120,-

    This collection argues there is an unacknowledged racial dimension to the production and consumption of food under globalization. Building on case studies from across the world, it advances the conceptualization of race by emphasizing embodiment, circulation and materiality, while adding to food advocacy an antiracist perspective it often lacks.

  • - Critical Approaches to Diet and Dietary Intervention
     
    2 420,-

    Offering a collection of critical, interdisciplinary replies and responses to the matter of 'hegemonic nutrition' this book presents contributions from a wide variety of individual perspectives including lay, professional and academics. The critical commentary collectively asks for a different, more attentive, and more holistic practice of nutrition. Importantly demonstrating how this 'new' nutrition is actually already being performed in small ways across the American continent. In doing so, the volume empowers diverse knowledges, histories, and practices of nutrition that have been marginalized, re-casts the objectives of dietary intervention, and most broadly, attempts to revolutionize the way that nutrition is done.

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