Wincott, Abigail ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3162-644X (2018) When Carrots Become Posh: Untangling the Relationship Between 'Heritage' Foods and Social Distinction. In: Alternative Food Politics: From the margins to the mainstream. Critical Food Studies . Routledge, London and New York. ISBN 978-1-138-30080-4
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Abstract / Summary
There has been a growing discourse of 'heritage' foods over the past decade. It is a discourse that incorporates rarebreed meats, traditional cheeses, vegetables and fruit. Rejected by mainstream industrial production, they food that are framed as highly endangered. We are urged to buy, grow and eat these treasures of human civilisation or lose them forever. As with other kinds of 'alternative' food, enthusiasts claim they represent a means to resist corporate dominance of the food system - in the words of a Reclaim the Fields poster, they might help us 'beet the system'. But there is an increasingly uncomfortable tension between these 'alternative' claims, and the sight of so many heritage products for sale in supermarkets and in upmarket restaurants and gastro-pubs, not to mention their prominence in the lifestyle sections of broadsheet newspapers aimed squarely at a well-off, middle class audience. What makes heritage foods 'posh' and does it matter? This chapter teases out the ways that heritage foods reproduce social distinction. It argues that they do so not only due to being 'co-opted' by businesses (a kind of 'heritage patina' in the tradition of greenwashing), but in ways that are intrinsic to the project of heritage consumption itself.
Item Type: | Book Section |
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ISBN: | 978-1-138-30080-4 |
Subjects: | Communication Film & Television > Television Communication > Journalism |
Courses by Department: | The School of Communication |
Depositing User: | Abigail Wincott |
Date Deposited: | 21 Feb 2019 14:47 |
Last Modified: | 18 Nov 2024 14:52 |
URI: | https://repository.falmouth.ac.uk/id/eprint/3129 |
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