ABSTRACT

Presenting contemporary case studies of everyday food practices, this book examines food habits and the ways they are evolving or resisting change.

The book draws on primary research with families, examining consumer practices and perceptions of food sustainability. It amplifies the voices of ordinary people, exploring how they experience and navigate everyday food practices. The concept of narrative provides a robust foundation for a dynamic and coherent conceptual approach while combining a social practice perspective which examines the interplay between routines, norms, ethics, and reflexivity with pragmatic sociology. This allows the analysis to follow food practices through adjustments and justifications. Focusing on food quality schemes as institutional tools for improving sustainable food systems, it includes diverse case studies from France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Norway, Serbia, the UK, as well as Sweden and Australia. Authors employ multi-method qualitative approaches to capture the interplay of discourses, practices, and materialities. The volume proposes research tools and methods for sustainable food, offering insights into how everyday food practices can contribute to socio-ecological food transitions.

This book will appeal to students, researchers, and policymakers interested in sustainable food systems and consumption, and their intersections with sociology, anthropology, cultural studies, and sustainable development. 

chapter |18 pages

Introducing ‘let eat be’

Title
A book exploring everyday food practices through the lens of sustainable consumption
Size: 0.62 MB

part I|96 pages

Everyday food practices in 40 European families

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chapter 1|16 pages

Conceptual approach of ‘let eat be’

Title
Size: 0.59 MB
Size: 0.60 MB

chapter 4|19 pages

Everyday food consumption

Title
Planning, purchasing, using, and discarding
Size: 0.81 MB

chapter 5|15 pages

‘I never focus on the price’

Title
Thinking about quality food through price sensitivity
Size: 2.35 MB

chapter 6|14 pages

The geography of taste

Title
Ethnocentric food choices and local identity
Size: 0.56 MB

part |56 pages

Bridge 1

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part II|54 pages

Sustainable gaze upon food consumption in households

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chapter 7|18 pages

Is there more space for care at the table?

Title
An ethnographic exploration of (un)sustainable family meals in France and Australia
Size: 0.56 MB

chapter 8|20 pages

Eating to sustain

Title
Challenges for local food diversity: The case of the Ringerike potato, a Norwegian PGI
Size: 2.38 MB

chapter 9|14 pages

Relationships and the storing of food

Title
Household dynamics and informal food consumption
Size: 0.54 MB

part |78 pages

Bridge 2

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part III|76 pages

Further thoughts on transition and research tools on sustainable food

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chapter 10|13 pages

The body in everyday food practices

Title
Becoming-with and attuning-to lived embodied entanglements
Size: 0.52 MB

chapter 11|17 pages

Dialogue

Title
A tool for new socio-ecological practices?
Size: 0.58 MB

chapter 12|18 pages

A taste of tomorrow

Title
How food informs imaginaries of the future
Size: 1.73 MB

chapter 13|19 pages

Semi-fictional narratives and images

Title
Inspiring socio-ecological transition through art-based methods
Size: 3.77 MB
Size: 0.62 MB