When Salt Turns Bitter and the Tablecloth Must Be Blue. On Food in Autism

<p>The article presented herein forms a part of the broad and rich trend of anthropological research on corporeality. The detailed problem undertaken by the author is the issue of eating disorders evinced by people with autism. Food is understood here as a broad and diverse set of practices, r...

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Main Author: Aleksandra Rzepkowska
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Polskie Towarzystwo Ludoznawcze 2015-12-01
Series:Łódzkie Studia Etnograficzne
Subjects:
Online Access:http://apcz.umk.pl/czasopisma//index.php/LSE/article/view/12162
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spelling doaj-0af815aa3705416083b6c7c9eddaacc92020-11-24T22:44:29ZengPolskie Towarzystwo LudoznawczeŁódzkie Studia Etnograficzne 0076-03822450-55442015-12-01540335110703When Salt Turns Bitter and the Tablecloth Must Be Blue. On Food in AutismAleksandra Rzepkowska0Chair of Ethnology and Cultural Anthropology Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń<p>The article presented herein forms a part of the broad and rich trend of anthropological research on corporeality. The detailed problem undertaken by the author is the issue of eating disorders evinced by people with autism. Food is understood here as a broad and diverse set of practices, reactions and forms of behaviour. The topic is discussed from the perspective of an anthropologist, with reference to concrete examples derived from several sources, i.e. selected biographical/autobiographical reports concerning the question of living with autism, materials collected during field research conducted since 2013 in the “Jaś i Małgosia” Foundation in Łódź and the author’s personal contacts with people with autism spectrum disorders. The reflections focus on the influence of the senses on the autists’ consumption practices, considering that autists certainly overstep the limits of the culture of food consumption accepted in their community, undermine the normative order of this culture and develop their own eating-related forms of behaviour and rituals, which are often undesirable from the point of view of the community in general.</p>http://apcz.umk.pl/czasopisma//index.php/LSE/article/view/12162autismeating disordersdietsensesthe autists’ consumption practices
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Aleksandra Rzepkowska
spellingShingle Aleksandra Rzepkowska
When Salt Turns Bitter and the Tablecloth Must Be Blue. On Food in Autism
Łódzkie Studia Etnograficzne
autism
eating disorders
diet
senses
the autists’ consumption practices
author_facet Aleksandra Rzepkowska
author_sort Aleksandra Rzepkowska
title When Salt Turns Bitter and the Tablecloth Must Be Blue. On Food in Autism
title_short When Salt Turns Bitter and the Tablecloth Must Be Blue. On Food in Autism
title_full When Salt Turns Bitter and the Tablecloth Must Be Blue. On Food in Autism
title_fullStr When Salt Turns Bitter and the Tablecloth Must Be Blue. On Food in Autism
title_full_unstemmed When Salt Turns Bitter and the Tablecloth Must Be Blue. On Food in Autism
title_sort when salt turns bitter and the tablecloth must be blue. on food in autism
publisher Polskie Towarzystwo Ludoznawcze
series Łódzkie Studia Etnograficzne
issn 0076-0382
2450-5544
publishDate 2015-12-01
description <p>The article presented herein forms a part of the broad and rich trend of anthropological research on corporeality. The detailed problem undertaken by the author is the issue of eating disorders evinced by people with autism. Food is understood here as a broad and diverse set of practices, reactions and forms of behaviour. The topic is discussed from the perspective of an anthropologist, with reference to concrete examples derived from several sources, i.e. selected biographical/autobiographical reports concerning the question of living with autism, materials collected during field research conducted since 2013 in the “Jaś i Małgosia” Foundation in Łódź and the author’s personal contacts with people with autism spectrum disorders. The reflections focus on the influence of the senses on the autists’ consumption practices, considering that autists certainly overstep the limits of the culture of food consumption accepted in their community, undermine the normative order of this culture and develop their own eating-related forms of behaviour and rituals, which are often undesirable from the point of view of the community in general.</p>
topic autism
eating disorders
diet
senses
the autists’ consumption practices
url http://apcz.umk.pl/czasopisma//index.php/LSE/article/view/12162
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