1st Edition

Doing Nutrition Differently Critical Approaches to Diet and Dietary Intervention

Edited By Allison Hayes-Conroy Copyright 2013
324 Pages
by Routledge

324 Pages
by Routledge

324 Pages
by Routledge

'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... Read more
Introduction; 1: Food Justice and Nutrition: A Conversation with Navina Khanna and Hank Herrera; 2: Our Plates are Full: Black Women and the Weight of Being Strong; 3: Other Women's Gardens: Radical Homemaking and Public Performance of the Politics of Feeding; 4: Ancient Dietary Wisdom for Tomorrow's Children; 5: Nutritional and Cultural Transitions in Alaska Native Food Systems: Legacies of Colonialism, Contested Innovation, and Rural-Urban Linkages; 6: Counseling the Whole Person; 7: Doing Veganism Differently: Racialized Trauma and the Personal Journey Towards Vegan Healing; 8: Traditional Knowledge and the Other in Alternative Dietary Advice; 9: Feminist Nutrition: Difference, Decolonization, and Dietary Change; 10: Nutrition is . . .; 11: Another Way of Doing Health: Lessons from the Zapatista Autonomous Communities in Chiapas, Mexico; 12: Food, Community and Power from a Historical Perspective: Keys to Understanding Death by 'Lethargy' in Santa Maria del Antigua del Darien 1; 13: The Nutricentric Consumer; 14: Should we Fix Food Deserts?: The Politics and Practice of Mapping Food Access; 15: Mobilizing Caring Citizenship and Jamie Oliver's Food Revolution; Concluding Questions

Biography

Allison Hayes-Conroy received her PhD in geography from Clark University and her MA in geography from the University of Hawai'i at Manoa. She is currently an assistant professor in the department of Geography and Urban Studies at Temple University. She has authored two books on the culture and politics of food and agriculture, as well a number of papers on the visceral politics of food. Her current research centers on food security in Medellin, Colombia. Jessica Hayes-Conroy received her PhD in geography and women’s studies from Penn State University and her MA in geography from the University of Vermont. She recently served a Mellon Post-Doctoral Fellow in Environmental Studies and Women’s Studies at Wheaton College in Norton, MA. She is currently an assistant professor of Women’s Studies at Hobart and Williams Smith Colleges. She has authored papers on alternative food, visceral geography, and political ecology. Her current research centers on critical perspectives of nutrition intervention.

’Doing Nutrition Differently is a much-needed intervention into the increasingly moralised and medicalised realms of eating. Across a wide spectrum of concerns - from food deserts, the eating practices of the Zapatistas, to older women’s garden - this collection engages with core issues of food justice through the perspectives of gender, ethnicity, and geo-politics. It should be required readings for academics and practitioners alike.’ Elspeth Probyn, University of Sydney, Australia and author of Oceanic Entanglements ’Food studies scholars have often asked "what is nutrition?". In Doing Nutrition Differently the Hayes-Conroys show us that the constitution of "nutrition" is in the complex relationships between eating, food, health and the body. In their questioning of the epistemological assumptions that underpin nutrition, this book provides original and important answers to the question.’ Jessica Mudry, Concordia University, Canada 'Doing Nutrition Differently cracks open an entirely new field of inquiry - and does so with creativity, nuance, and deep reflexivity. Anyone who has been at all skeptical of the content and delivery of nutritional advice will savor the insights authors in this book serve up - with no admonitions about how to "eat right".' Julie Guthman, University of California at Santa Cruz, USA