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Shifting food facts : dietary discourse in a post-truth culture / Alissa Overend.

By: Overend, Alissa.
Series: Publisher: Abingdon, Oxon ; New York : Routledge, 2021Copyright date: ©2021Description: 1 online resource.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9781351000109; 1351000101; 1351000098; 9781351000086; 135100008X; 9781351000116; 135100011X; 9781351000093.Subject(s): Food | NutritionDDC classification: 641.3 Online resources: An electronic book accessible through the World Wide Web; click to view Summary: This book offers a much-needed reframing of food discourse by presenting alternative ways of thinking about the changing politics of food, eating, and nutrition. It examines critical epistemological questions of how food knowledge comes to be shaped and why we see pendulum swings when it comes to the question of what to eat. As food facts peak and peril in the face of conflicting dietary advice and nutritional evidence, this book situates shifting food truths through a critical analysis of how healthy eating is framed and contested, particularly amid fluctuating truth claims of a post-truth culture. It explores what a post-truth epistemological framework can offer critical food and health studies, considers the type of questions this may enable, and looks at what can be gained by relinquishing rigid empirical pursuits of singular dietary truths. In focusing too intently on the separation betweenfood fact and food fiction, the book argues that politically dangerous and epistemically narrow ideas of one way to eat healthy or right are perpetuated. Drawing on a range of archival materials related to food and health and interviews with registered dietitians, this book offers various examples of shifting food truths, from macro-historical genealogies to contemporary case studies ofdairy, wheat, and meat. Providing a rich and innovative analysis, this book offers news ways to think about, and act upon,our increasingly complex food landscapes. It does so byloosening our empirical Western reliance on singular food facts in favour of an articulation of contextual food truths that situate the problems of health as problems of living, not as individualistic problems of eating. It will be of interest to students, scholars, and practitioners working in food studies, food politics, sociology, environmental geography, health, nutrition, and cultural studies.
Item type Current location Call number Status Notes Date due Barcode
Main Collection Taylor's Library - Perpetual(TU)
641.3 (Browse shelf) e-book GENLS,GENLS,03,CL,PPT

This book offers a much-needed reframing of food discourse by presenting alternative ways of thinking about the changing politics of food, eating, and nutrition. It examines critical epistemological questions of how food knowledge comes to be shaped and why we see pendulum swings when it comes to the question of what to eat. As food facts peak and peril in the face of conflicting dietary advice and nutritional evidence, this book situates shifting food truths through a critical analysis of how healthy eating is framed and contested, particularly amid fluctuating truth claims of a post-truth culture. It explores what a post-truth epistemological framework can offer critical food and health studies, considers the type of questions this may enable, and looks at what can be gained by relinquishing rigid empirical pursuits of singular dietary truths. In focusing too intently on the separation betweenfood fact and food fiction, the book argues that politically dangerous and epistemically narrow ideas of one way to eat healthy or right are perpetuated. Drawing on a range of archival materials related to food and health and interviews with registered dietitians, this book offers various examples of shifting food truths, from macro-historical genealogies to contemporary case studies ofdairy, wheat, and meat. Providing a rich and innovative analysis, this book offers news ways to think about, and act upon,our increasingly complex food landscapes. It does so byloosening our empirical Western reliance on singular food facts in favour of an articulation of contextual food truths that situate the problems of health as problems of living, not as individualistic problems of eating. It will be of interest to students, scholars, and practitioners working in food studies, food politics, sociology, environmental geography, health, nutrition, and cultural studies.

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