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spelling ndltd-OhioLink-oai-etd.ohiolink.edu-antioch13310749972021-08-03T05:27:25Z Recipes of Resolve: Food and Meaning in Post-Diluvian New Orleans Menck, Jessica Claire Agricultural Economics American Studies Cultural Anthropology Ecology Minority and Ethnic Groups Nutrition Organizational Behavior Political Science Social Research Social Structure Sustainability New Orleans food meaning-making crisis disaster resiliency Hurricane Katrina food industry ethnography participatory action research food assessment civic groups leadership sustainability food systems civic agriculture culinary history In 2005 the city of New Orleans experienced catastrophic flooding as a result of the failure of the federal levee system following Hurricane Katrina. This was an immediate disaster that evolved into a longer-term crisis as the city, state, and national government struggled to respond to the event. This study focuses on one part of managing crisis: meaning making. Specifically, the study investigates meaning making within the food community of New Orleans, asking the questions: is food a way for individuals and groups to make meaning following critical change events such as the failure of the federal levee system in New Orleans, and if so, how? It employs tools of ethnographic inquiry and participatory action research, such as: case study, interviews, field notes, photography, recipes, and multiple media, to suggest an approach to investigating meaning making within food systems affected by critical change events. The sample of the study draws on a wide spectrum of experience and perspective on food in the region. This spectrum ranges from restaurateurs and others who go back multiple generations in the New Orleans food community and new comers, including two groups of recent immigrants. This study finds that despite these differences, there are four common discourses that leaders and others in this community use to think and talk about food in relationship to critical change: culture, ecology, economics, and politics. The study embodies an approach that goes beyond the dominant nutrition versus culture paradigm. The discourses this study reports, may serve as a framework for investigating the meaning of food in other locales and contexts of change. Finally, this study illustrates the emergence of formal and informal leadership in the face of critical change. In this way, the study moves beyond the dominant attention given to people in formal positions of authority to focus on the leadership of people in their resolve to make meaning out of crisis. This dissertation integrates multiple media to express data and findings, and is accompanied by twenty-six embedded audio files. The electronic version of the Dissertation is accessible in the open-access OhioLink ETD Center, www.ohiolink.edu/etd/ 2012-03-07 English text Antioch University / OhioLINK http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=antioch1331074997 http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=antioch1331074997 unrestricted This thesis or dissertation is protected by copyright: all rights reserved. It may not be copied or redistributed beyond the terms of applicable copyright laws.
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic Agricultural Economics
American Studies
Cultural Anthropology
Ecology
Minority and Ethnic Groups
Nutrition
Organizational Behavior
Political Science
Social Research
Social Structure
Sustainability
New Orleans
food
meaning-making
crisis
disaster
resiliency
Hurricane Katrina
food industry
ethnography
participatory action research
food assessment
civic groups
leadership
sustainability
food systems
civic agriculture
culinary history
spellingShingle Agricultural Economics
American Studies
Cultural Anthropology
Ecology
Minority and Ethnic Groups
Nutrition
Organizational Behavior
Political Science
Social Research
Social Structure
Sustainability
New Orleans
food
meaning-making
crisis
disaster
resiliency
Hurricane Katrina
food industry
ethnography
participatory action research
food assessment
civic groups
leadership
sustainability
food systems
civic agriculture
culinary history
Menck, Jessica Claire
Recipes of Resolve: Food and Meaning in Post-Diluvian New Orleans
author Menck, Jessica Claire
author_facet Menck, Jessica Claire
author_sort Menck, Jessica Claire
title Recipes of Resolve: Food and Meaning in Post-Diluvian New Orleans
title_short Recipes of Resolve: Food and Meaning in Post-Diluvian New Orleans
title_full Recipes of Resolve: Food and Meaning in Post-Diluvian New Orleans
title_fullStr Recipes of Resolve: Food and Meaning in Post-Diluvian New Orleans
title_full_unstemmed Recipes of Resolve: Food and Meaning in Post-Diluvian New Orleans
title_sort recipes of resolve: food and meaning in post-diluvian new orleans
publisher Antioch University / OhioLINK
publishDate 2012
url http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=antioch1331074997
work_keys_str_mv AT menckjessicaclaire recipesofresolvefoodandmeaninginpostdiluvianneworleans
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