ABSTRACT
Interrogating the intersections of food, journalism, and politics, this book offers a critical examination of food media and journalism, and its political potential against the backdrop of contemporary social challenges.
Contributors analyze current and historic examples such as #BlackLivesMatter, COVID-19, climate change, Brexit, food sovereignty, and identity politics, highlighting how food media and journalism reach beyond the commercial imperatives of lifestyle journalism to negotiate nationalism, globalization, and social inequalities. The volume challenges the idea that food media/journalism are trivial and apolitical by drawing attention to the complex ways that storytelling about food has engaged political discourses in the past, and the innovative ways it is doing so today.
Bringing together international scholars from a variety of disciplines, the book will be of great interest to scholars and students of journalism, communication, media studies, food studies, sociology, and anthropology.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |16 pages
Introduction
part I|66 pages
Engaging with Systems of Injustice and Disparity
part II|49 pages
Raising Questions of Legitimacy, Power, and Good Citizenship
part III|48 pages
Negotiating Regional, National, and Global Identities
part IV|43 pages
Recovering History and (Re)producing Memory