Consuming Identity

Consuming Identity
Title Consuming Identity PDF eBook
Author Ashli Quesinberry Stokes
Publisher Univ. Press of Mississippi
Total Pages 236
Release 2016-11-02
Genre Social Science
ISBN 149680919X

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Southerners love to talk food, quickly revealing likes and dislikes, regional preferences, and their own delicious stories. Because the topic often crosses lines of race, class, gender, and region, food supplies a common fuel to launch discussion. Consuming Identity sifts through the self-definitions, allegiances, and bonds made possible and strengthened through the theme of southern foodways. The book focuses on the role food plays in building identities, accounting for the messages food sends about who we are, how we see ourselves, and how we see others. While many volumes examine southern food, this one is the first to focus on food's rhetorical qualities and the effect that it can have on culture. The volume examines southern food stories that speak to the identity of the region, explain how food helps to build identities, and explore how it enables cultural exchange. Food acts rhetorically, with what we choose to eat and serve sending distinct messages. It also serves a vital identity-building function, factoring heavily into our memories, narratives, and understanding of who we are. Finally, because food and the tales surrounding it are so important to southerners, the rhetoric of food offers a significant and meaningful way to open up dialogue in the region. By sharing and celebrating both foodways and the food itself, southerners are able to revel in shared histories and traditions. In this way individuals find a common language despite the divisions of race and class that continue to plague the south. The rich subject of southern fare serves up a significant starting point for understanding the powerful rhetorical potential of all food.

Consumption and Identity in Asian American Coming-of-Age Novels

Consumption and Identity in Asian American Coming-of-Age Novels
Title Consumption and Identity in Asian American Coming-of-Age Novels PDF eBook
Author Jennifer Ho
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 220
Release 2013-09-13
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 1135469199

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This interdisciplinary study examines the theme of consumption in Asian American literature, connection representations of cooking and eating with ethnic identity formation. Using four discrete modes of identification--historic pride, consumerism, mourning, and fusion--Jennifer Ho examines how Asian American adolescents challenge and revise their cultural legacies and experiment with alternative ethnic affiliations through their relationships to food.

Consuming Identity

Consuming Identity
Title Consuming Identity PDF eBook
Author John Patrick Taylor
Publisher
Total Pages 68
Release 1998
Genre Advertising
ISBN

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Consumption, Identity and Style

Consumption, Identity and Style
Title Consumption, Identity and Style PDF eBook
Author Alan Tomlinson
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 181
Release 2006-05-18
Genre Business & Economics
ISBN 1134982496

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First Published in 1990. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.

Consumption and Identity at Work

Consumption and Identity at Work
Title Consumption and Identity at Work PDF eBook
Author Paul du Gay
Publisher SAGE
Total Pages 224
Release 1996-02-29
Genre Social Science
ISBN 9780803979284

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The realms of consumption have typically been seen to be distinct from those of work and production. This book examines how contemporary rhetorics and discourses of organizational change are breaking down such distinctions - with significant implications for the construction of subjectivities and identities at work. In particular, Paul du Gay shows how the capacities and predispositions required of consumers and those required of employees are increasingly difficult to distinguish. Both consumers and employees are represented as autonomous, responsible, calculating individuals. They are constituted as such in the language of consumer cultures and the all-pervasive discourses of enterprise whereby persons are required to be

Jewish Eating and Identity Through the Ages

Jewish Eating and Identity Through the Ages
Title Jewish Eating and Identity Through the Ages PDF eBook
Author David C. Kraemer
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 379
Release 2007-11-21
Genre Religion
ISBN 1135905819

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This book explores the history of Jewish eating and Jewish identity, from the Bible to the present. The lessons of this book rest squarely on the much-quoted insight: 'you are what you eat.' But this book goes beyond that simple truism to recognise that you are not only what you eat, but also how, when, where and with whom you eat. This book begins at the beginning – with the Torah – and then follows the history of Jewish eating until the modern age and even into our own day. Along the way, it travels from Jewish homes in the Holy Land and Babylonia (Iraq) to France and Spain and Italy, then to Germany and Poland and finally to the United States of America. It looks at significant developments in Jewish eating in all ages: in the ancient Near East and Persia, in the Classical age, throughout the Middle Ages and into Modernity. It pays careful attention to Jewish eating laws (halakha) in each time and place, but it does not stop there: it also looks for Jews who bend and break the law, who eat like Romans or Christians regardless of the law and who develop their own hybrid customs according to their own 'laws', whatever Jewish tradition might tell them. In this colourful history of Jewish eating, we get more than a taste of how expressive and crucial eating choices have always been.

Consuming Symbolic Goods

Consuming Symbolic Goods
Title Consuming Symbolic Goods PDF eBook
Author Wilfred Dolfsma
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 159
Release 2013-09-13
Genre Business & Economics
ISBN 1317991346

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The phenomenon of consumption has increasingly drawn attention from economists. While the ‘sole purpose of production is consumption’, as Adam Smith has claimed, economists have up to recently generally ignored the topic. This book brings together a range of different perspectives on the topic of consumption that will finally shed the necessary light on a largely neglected theme, such as Why is the consumption of symbolic goods different than that of goods that are not constitutive of individuals’ identity? How does the consumption of symbolic goods affect social processes and economic phenomena? Will taking consumption (of symbolic goods) seriously impact economics itself? The book discusses these issues theoretically, and, through analyses of such cases as food, religion, fashion, empirically as well. It also discusses the possible role in the future of consumption. This book was previously published as a special issue of Review of Social Economy