Feeding the Middle Classes
Taste, Class and Domestic Food Practices
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Bristol University Press
Published:20th Nov '23
Should be back in stock very soon
Political and public stories about class and food rarely scrutinize how socio-economic and cultural resources enable access to certain foods.
Tracing the symbolic links between everyday eating at home and broader social frameworks, this book examines how classed relations play out in middle-class homes to show why class is relevant to all understandings of food in Great Britain.
The author illuminates how ‘good’ food, and the identities configured through its consumption, is associated with middle-class lifestyles and why this relationship is often unquestioned and thus saliently normalized.
Considering food consumption in a wider social context, the book offers an alternative understanding of class relations, which extends academic, political and public debates about privilege.
“This is an important study: with great care and sophistication Kate Gibson delineates the ways in which food is never ‘just’ food, but is laden with meanings that carry the weight of social class.” Steph Lawler, University of York
ISBN: 9781529214888
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
180 pages