Abstract
Despite a contemporary milieu that emphasises fluidities across gender boundaries
and shifting roles, the 75 respondents in the study that informs this paper presented
their food auto/biographies as a type of transformation narrative heavily influenced
by the continued intersectionalities of gender and class. Respondents utilised
‘common vocabularies’ (Mills 1959) and conformed to cultural scripts of what might
be considered appropriate middle class and highly gendered foodways when
developing a taste for ‘good’ food. The focus of this paper centres on the notion of
food ‘play’ rather than food ‘work’ as significant in the performance of a gendered
cultural habitus, whereby men distanced themselves from notions of feminised
domesticity and health discourses by resorting to both hegemonic masculinities and
epicurean foodways. This raises questions with regards to cultural influences on
everyday foodways, as well as notions of what it means to be a gourmet, epicure
and/or food adventurer within a contemporary foodscape. Indeed, for the male
respondents in this UK based study a commitment to epicurean foodways becomes
a field for the performance of hegemonic masculinities with the ‘gourmet food
adventurer’ emerging from this culinary field coded elite and male.
Original language | English |
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Number of pages | 0 |
Journal | Women Gender and Research |
Volume | 0 |
Issue number | 0 |
Publication status | Published - 17 Dec 2015 |