Les gens bien mangent bien : comprendre le répertoire culturel de l’alimentation éthique

Ethical consumption is understood by scholars as a key way that individuals can address social and ecological problems. While a hopeful trend, it raises the question of whether ethical consumption is primarily an elite social practice, especially since niche markets for ethical food products (for ex...

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Main Authors: Josée JOHNSTON, Alexandra RODNEY, Michelle SZABO
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Institut des Amériques 2012-12-01
Series:IdeAs : Idées d’Amériques
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/ideas/475
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spelling doaj-5beb641460a04846bf6076bc9ed3763e2020-11-24T22:00:33ZengInstitut des AmériquesIdeAs : Idées d’Amériques1950-57012012-12-01310.4000/ideas.475Les gens bien mangent bien : comprendre le répertoire culturel de l’alimentation éthiqueJosée JOHNSTONAlexandra RODNEYMichelle SZABOEthical consumption is understood by scholars as a key way that individuals can address social and ecological problems. While a hopeful trend, it raises the question of whether ethical consumption is primarily an elite social practice, especially since niche markets for ethical food products (for example, organics, fair-trade) are thought to attract wealthy, educated consumers. Scholars do not fully understand the extent to which privileged populations think about food ethics in everyday shopping, or how groups with limited resources conceptualize ethical consumption. To address these knowledge gaps, the first goal of this paper is to better understand how consumers from different class backgrounds understand ethical eating and work these ideas into everyday food practices. We draw from 40 in-depth interviews with 20 families in two Toronto neighborhoods. Our second goal is to investigate which participants have privileged access to ethical eating, and which participants appear relatively marginalized. Drawing conceptually from cultural sociology, we explore how ethical eating constitutes a cultural repertoire shaped by factors such as class and ethno-cultural background, and how symbolic boundaries are drawn through eating practices. We find that privilege does appear to facilitate access to dominant ethical eating repertoires, and that environmental considerations figure strongly in these repertoires. While low income and racialized communities draw less on dominant ethical eating repertoires, their eating practices are by no means amoral; we document creative adaptations of dominant ethical eating repertoires to fit low income circumstances, as well as the use of different cultural frameworks to address moral issues around eating.http://journals.openedition.org/ideas/475classcultural repertoireethical consumptionfood
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Josée JOHNSTON
Alexandra RODNEY
Michelle SZABO
spellingShingle Josée JOHNSTON
Alexandra RODNEY
Michelle SZABO
Les gens bien mangent bien : comprendre le répertoire culturel de l’alimentation éthique
IdeAs : Idées d’Amériques
class
cultural repertoire
ethical consumption
food
author_facet Josée JOHNSTON
Alexandra RODNEY
Michelle SZABO
author_sort Josée JOHNSTON
title Les gens bien mangent bien : comprendre le répertoire culturel de l’alimentation éthique
title_short Les gens bien mangent bien : comprendre le répertoire culturel de l’alimentation éthique
title_full Les gens bien mangent bien : comprendre le répertoire culturel de l’alimentation éthique
title_fullStr Les gens bien mangent bien : comprendre le répertoire culturel de l’alimentation éthique
title_full_unstemmed Les gens bien mangent bien : comprendre le répertoire culturel de l’alimentation éthique
title_sort les gens bien mangent bien : comprendre le répertoire culturel de l’alimentation éthique
publisher Institut des Amériques
series IdeAs : Idées d’Amériques
issn 1950-5701
publishDate 2012-12-01
description Ethical consumption is understood by scholars as a key way that individuals can address social and ecological problems. While a hopeful trend, it raises the question of whether ethical consumption is primarily an elite social practice, especially since niche markets for ethical food products (for example, organics, fair-trade) are thought to attract wealthy, educated consumers. Scholars do not fully understand the extent to which privileged populations think about food ethics in everyday shopping, or how groups with limited resources conceptualize ethical consumption. To address these knowledge gaps, the first goal of this paper is to better understand how consumers from different class backgrounds understand ethical eating and work these ideas into everyday food practices. We draw from 40 in-depth interviews with 20 families in two Toronto neighborhoods. Our second goal is to investigate which participants have privileged access to ethical eating, and which participants appear relatively marginalized. Drawing conceptually from cultural sociology, we explore how ethical eating constitutes a cultural repertoire shaped by factors such as class and ethno-cultural background, and how symbolic boundaries are drawn through eating practices. We find that privilege does appear to facilitate access to dominant ethical eating repertoires, and that environmental considerations figure strongly in these repertoires. While low income and racialized communities draw less on dominant ethical eating repertoires, their eating practices are by no means amoral; we document creative adaptations of dominant ethical eating repertoires to fit low income circumstances, as well as the use of different cultural frameworks to address moral issues around eating.
topic class
cultural repertoire
ethical consumption
food
url http://journals.openedition.org/ideas/475
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