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Chapter 6 - Social eating: identity, communion and difference

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 September 2009

Sarah Sceats
Affiliation:
Kingston University, Surrey
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Summary

As in the previous chapter, the focus here is on social eating. But while chapter 5 focuses on the literary use of food and manners as signifiers in a social context, this final chapter moves towards a more uncertain, expansive and perhaps challenging view, exploring how eating might be deemed to relate to society as a whole, to social function and to some conception of community. Whether ‘community’ is more than an ideal remains to be seen. How eating is involved depends upon the play of relationships within and between social groups of various sizes, from family, work and friendship clusters to class, ethnicity or society at large.

Given the scale of such a canvas, probably the best way to construct a general or societal perspective is by looking at particular, representative examples of what might constitute social eating. How, for example, do food and eating relate to the identity or cohesion of a certain group and the links between that group and its society? How are food and eating instrumental in the formation of identity in a particular society and what role do they play in socialisation? What is the cultural place of ritual or the social implication of cooking? And are such questions answerable in other than relative terms, given that food and behaviour depend very much on contexts of period, ethnicity, gender, religion, ideology, nationality and cultural systems?

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2000

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