ISBN-13: 9781032447698 / Twarda / 2023 / 232 str.
This book provides in-depth perspectives on communal food and dining practices. In doing so, it challenges less sustainable lifestyles that are encouraged by a social system based on unlimited economic growth.
"Eating together, both with family and friends and with strangers, is surely one of the oldest customs we have -- a gateway to bonding family and community. Now universally less common as an everyday event, it remains nonetheless a focal point for casual social engagement. This book has much to tell us about the decline of family dinners in favour of fast food in front of the TV, as well as much to remind us about what we are missing."
-Professor Robin Dunbar – Experimental psychology, University of Oxford
“This volume does important work for the interdisciplinary field of food studies because it provides broader theoretical and empirical perspectives on conviviality, commensality, and the art of eating. The editors have gathered a set of thought-provoking case studies and theoretical reflections on the relationship between marketplace ideologies, social norms, and community and family life.”
-Professor Benedetta Cappellini – Durham University Business School
Introduction
Tamas Lestar
i. Eating together in the family circle (case studies)
1. TV or not TV? A comparison of children and young peoples’ experiences of conviviality in Spain and the UK.
Surinder Phull
2. Negotiating food, negotiating family well-being: eating together in Algerian modern families
Souad Birady and Hichem Sofiene Salaouatchi
3. Dining together with family and mental well-being of young people: A study conducted in four Asian countries
Seyedeh Khadijeh Taghizadeh, Syed Abidur Rahman & Behnaz Saboori
4. Swedengate – When commensality norms collide
Håkan Jönsson
ii. Eating together in communities (case studies)
5. Bringing the nation (back) together: The Big Jubilee Lunch in the UK (2022)
Malgorzata Radomska
6. Potluck in the Seventh-day Adventist Church. Two auto-ethnographic accounts
Tamas Lestar & Jason Garcia Portilla
7. Eating together – staff members’ perceptions of a social lunch meal in kindergarten
Hege Wergedahl
8. Plant-Based lunch in school: Eating Together as a means to promote sustainable and healthy eating
Malliga Marimuthu
9. The influence of local gastronomy on tourist behavioural intentions: a case of Saharan cuisine
Ghidouche Faouzi, Nechoud Lamia & Ait-Yahia Ghidouche Kamila
iii. Theorising the present and future practice of eating together
10. Commensality and identification in a Christian context: stable and transient elements
Stephanos Avakian, Pavlos Stavrakakis
11. Being here, being there: eating and drinking together as a socially constructed issue
Hugues Séraphin, Shem Wambugu Maingi & Maximiliano Korstanje
12. The evolution in Nordic eating and commensality: a focus on solitary eating practices in Finland
Silvia Gaiani
13. The banquet in Western Hospitality: a descriptive reading of Culinary Tourism
Maximiliano Korstanje
14. Beyond conviviality: Facets of Eating Together
Nicklas Neuman & Håkan Jönsson
Conclusions
Tamas Lestar
Tamas Lestar is as Senior Lecturer in Business Management. He holds a PhD in management and sustainability from the University of Essex. For several years, he has been investigating spiritual communities and practices in the context of dietary change and sustainability transitions. Tamas taught qualitative research methods, new venture creation, social innovation and other management and organisation modules internationally, including in China. His research interest include: Sustainability Transitions, CO2 transitions, Social Practice Theory, Post-structuralism; Political Discourse Theory, Ethnography, Dietary change; Veganism; Conviviality (eating together); Degrowth / Postgrowth economy (New Economics), Sharing (economy); Job-share; Reduced working hours, Spirituality, Religion & Pro-environmental practice, Spiritual leadership and organisational hierarchies, Transformative learning; Second / Third-order learning, Eco-communities; Eco-farms; Eco-tours, Agency for change, East Africa, Asia.
Manuela Pilato is a Senior Lecturer in Business Management. She holds a PhD in Agrifood Business. She has been working in research and management positions in different European universities in the Agribusiness and EU policy sector, including the University of Catania (Italy), the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE) and the University of Bucharest (Romania). Since 2014, she has been working for the University of Winchester within the Faculty of Business, Law and Sport, expanding her research and teaching interests in Responsible Management, Sustainable Development and Global Issues. In 2017 she also joined the Politics and Society team in the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, as Senior Lecturer in Politics. She has extensive research experience and robust analysis testified by participation in conferences, international networks, publications in peer-reviewed journals and edited volumes in the Agribusiness; Environmental and Sustainability issues. Her current research interests include Agrifood management; Sustainability and Environmental management and European and global environmental, food and health issues.
Hugues Séraphin is a Senior Lecturer in Tourism, Hospitality and Events. He joined Oxford Brookes Business School in January 2023. Hugues holds a PhD from the University of Perpignan (Université de Perpignan Via Domitia, France). His current research interests include: Sustainable Tourism / Events;Tourism (and Events) in Post-Colonial and Post-Conflict Destinations; Children in Tourism, Hospitality and Events and Tourism Education.
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