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The Political Language of Food Joe Abisaid

The Political Language of Food By Joe Abisaid

The Political Language of Food by Joe Abisaid


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Summary

This edited collection explores how food language is political. The contributors examine the production of food language in conjunction with historical social movements, food labeling practices, illustrations of social class, as well as corporate and bureaucratic language.

The Political Language of Food Summary

The Political Language of Food by Joe Abisaid

The Political Language of Food addresses why the language used in the production, marketing, selling, and consumption of food is inherently political. Food language is rarely neutral and is often strategically vague, which tends to serve the interests of powerful entities.Boerboom and his contributors critique the language of food-based messages and examine how such language-including idioms, tropes, euphemisms, invented terms, etc.-serves to both mislead and obscure relationships between food and the resulting community, health, labor, and environmental impacts. Employing diverse methodologies, the contributors examine on a micro-level the textual and rhetorical elements of food-based language itself. The Political Language of Food is both timely and important and will appeal to scholars of media studies, political communication, and rhetoric.

The Political Language of Food Reviews

This collection of 12 essays focuses on the political contexts of producing, marketing, selling, and consuming food, as well as producing 'food language.' Each author approaches a major food-based issue, such as vegetarianism, obesity, or organic foods, by analyzing and deconstructing the language of food as the basis for his or her research methodology. Essays are organized into four sections: 'The Language of Food-Based Social Movements,' 'Food Language and Social Class,' 'The Language of Food Labeling,' and 'Critiques of Corporate Bureaucratic Language.' All contributors are communications, media, or rhetoric professors; though authors from a narrow range of disciplines may support the editor's thematic emphasis, their homogeneity may prove a weakness when they write about the interdisciplinary field of food studies. . . .Readers will enjoy the provocative essay 'Exoticizing Poverty in Bizarre Foods America.' This anthology can serve classes in sociology, anthropology, geography, marketing, communications, and food studies. For university libraries or large public libraries. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates, graduate students, researchers/faculty, and professionals/practitioners. * CHOICE *
This book is extremely clear and will prove helpful for people interested in any subject relating to the (political) language involving food. It would work well for a classroom setting because it covers so many different perspectives. It is great for people to know about the discrepancies involving the food industry, with examples and individual stories. I recommend this book to anyone who is looking for new perspectives on this concept. * Communication Research Trends *
The Political Language of Food delights readers with a bountiful harvest of perspectives, theories, and problematics. No doubt, it will be mandatory reading for those interested in the intersection of food and language. -- Justin Eckstein, Pacific Lutheran University
The Political Language of Food is a comprehensive collection of essays, with a variety of foci and approaches, which all reinforce the central tenet that if we truly want to understand how food functions politically, socially, culturally, and materially, we must begin by examining the murky depths of language, by dissecting the very words that we use to discuss it, and by interrogating the key meanings surrounding it -- Carlnita P. Greene, University of Oregon, author of Gourmands and Gluttons: The Rhetoric of Food Excess
Emphasizing the political nature of food marketing and consumption, as well as the rhetorical construction of food language, The Political Language of Food...offers a multitude of methodological approaches to topics such as back-to-the-land food movements, culinary slumming, and the greenwashing of food discourse. -- Laura K. Hahn, Humboldt State University

About Joe Abisaid

Samuel Boerboom is assistant professor of media studies in the Department of Communication and Theatre at Montana State University Billings.

Table of Contents

Introduction: How does food language function politically? Samuel Boerboom Chapter 1 Tracing the Back to the Land Trope: Self-Sufficiency, Counterculture, and Community Jessica M. Prody Chapter 2 Vegetariens Radicaux: John Oswald and the Trope of Sympathy in Revolutionary Paris Justin Killian Chapter 3 The Revolution Will Not Be (Food) Reviewed: Politics of Agitation and Control of Occupy Kitchen Amy Pason Chapter 4 Haute Colonialism: Exocitizing Povery in Bizarre Foods America Casey Ryan Kelly Chapter 5 Pungent Yet Problematic: The Class-Based Framing of Ramps in the New York Times and the Charleston Gazette Melissa Boehm Chapter 6 Constructing Taste and Waste as Habitus: Food and Matters of Access and In/Security Leda Cooks Chapter 7 Tying the Knot: How Industry and Advocacy Organizations Market Language as Humane Joseph L. Abisaid Chapter 8 Corn Allergy: Public Policy, Private Devastation Kathy Brady Chapter 9 Family Farms with Happy Cows: A Narrative Analysis of Horizon Organic Dairy Packaging Labels Jennifer L. Adams Chapter 10 Chipotle Mexican Grill's Meatwashing Propaganda: Corporate-Speak Hiding Suffering of Commodity Animals Ellen W. Gorsevski Chapter 11 Corporate Colonization in the Market: Discursive Closures and the Greenwashing of Food Discourse Megan A. Koch and Cristin A. Compton Chapter 12 Mistaken Consensus and the Body-as-Machine Analogy Samuel Boerboom

Additional information

NLS9781498505574
9781498505574
1498505570
The Political Language of Food by Joe Abisaid
New
Paperback
Lexington Books
2017-04-15
282
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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