Food Anxiety in Globalising Vietnam
eBook - ePub

Food Anxiety in Globalising Vietnam

  1. English
  2. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  3. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Food Anxiety in Globalising Vietnam

About this book

This open access book approaches the anxieties inherent in food consumption and production in Vietnam. The country's rapid and recent economic integration into global agro-food systems and consumer markets spurred a new quality of food safety concerns, health issues and distrust in food distribution networks that have become increasingly obscured. This edited volume further puts the eating body centre stage by following how gendered body norms, food taboos, power structures and social differentiation shape people's ambivalent relations with food. It uncovers Vietnam's trajectories of agricultural modernisation against which consumers and producers manoeuvre amongst food self-sufficiency, security and abundance.
Food Anxiety in Globalising Vietnam is explicitly about 'dangerous' food – regarding its materiality and meaning. It provides social science perspectives on anxieties related to food and surrounding discourses that travel between the local and the global, the individual and society and into the body. Therefore, the book's lens of food anxiety matters for social theory and for understanding the embeddedness and discontinuities of food globalizations in Vietnam and beyond. Due to its rich empirical base, methodological approaches and thematic foci, it will appeal to scholars, practitioners and students alike.

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Yes, you can access Food Anxiety in Globalising Vietnam by Judith Ehlert,Nora Katharina Faltmann in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Social Sciences & Public Health, Administration & Care. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Front Matter
  3. 1. Food Anxiety: Ambivalences Around Body and Identity, Food Safety, and Security
  4. Part I. Bodily Transgressions: Identity, Othering, and Self
  5. Part II. Food Safety: Trust, Responsibilisation, and Coping
  6. Part III. The Politics of Food Security
  7. 10. Concluding Remarks: Anxiety as Invariant of Human Relation to Food