Defining Food Agency: An Ethnographic Exploration of Home and Student Cooks in the Northeast

According to popular and academic sources, home cooking is in decline. Nutrition and public health scholars concern that a loss of cooking abilities may diminish individuals' control over their food choices, thus contributing to poor health outcomes. Yet, there are still many unanswered questio...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Carabello, Maria
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: ScholarWorks @ UVM 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://scholarworks.uvm.edu/graddis/453
http://scholarworks.uvm.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1452&context=graddis
id ndltd-uvm.edu-oai-scholarworks.uvm.edu-graddis-1452
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-uvm.edu-oai-scholarworks.uvm.edu-graddis-14522017-03-17T08:44:36Z Defining Food Agency: An Ethnographic Exploration of Home and Student Cooks in the Northeast Carabello, Maria According to popular and academic sources, home cooking is in decline. Nutrition and public health scholars concern that a loss of cooking abilities may diminish individuals' control over their food choices, thus contributing to poor health outcomes. Yet, there are still many unanswered questions. What skills, strategies, and knowledge sets are required to cook a meal on any given occasion? What capacity separates those who cook with ease from those who struggle to incorporate cooking into their daily routines? I propose that this difference is determined by an individual's capacity to employ a range of cognitive and technical skills related to meal preparation. I call this capacity 'food agency'. Drawing upon discourses of human agency developed in the social sciences, this food-specific theory considers how a home cook employs cognitive skills and sensory perceptions, while navigating'and shaping'various societal structures (e.g., schedule, budget, transportation, etc.) in the course of preparing a meal. Thus, to have food agency is to be empowered to act throughout the course of planning and preparing meals. To better understand the form and function of food agency in everyday contexts, this thesis has pursued two ethnographic explorations. The first study explored food agency from the vantage of routine performance by looking at the everyday practices of twenty-seven home cooks in the Northeastern United States. Data was collected through videotaping and observing the home cooks as they prepared typical dinnertime meals, followed-up with semi-structured interviews. The data has revealed a working model of the interrelated components seen as essential to consistent cooking practice, and thus to food agency'a conglomeration of skills, techniques, and strategies; structural and sensory guidelines; confidence and self-efficacy. All the home cooks were found to possess a basic scaffolding for food agency, yet the degree to which each had developed fluency in any given area was contingent upon personal experience. This supports the view that food agency is an actively acquired and dynamic capacity best understood as fluid rather than dichotomous. The second study explored food agency through guided progression, by following a cohort of eight college students at the University of Vermont as they learned how to cook during a semester-long food and culture course. Data was collected through videotaping the students as they cooked, and by interviewing them about their food behaviors and experiences at the beginning and end of the semester. The findings outlined the students' various trajectories as they progressed in many of the component areas involved in food agency'for example, skills, techniques, organizational strategies, sensory engagement, and a sense of individual and collective efficacy around meal preparation. While the longitudinal scope of this study was limited, these results suggest a need to develop similar curricula for hands-on cooking interventions that can be offered in a more diverse range of settings and contexts. 2015-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf http://scholarworks.uvm.edu/graddis/453 http://scholarworks.uvm.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1452&context=graddis Graduate College Dissertations and Theses en ScholarWorks @ UVM Cooking Ethnography Food Choice and Behavior Food Systems Sensory Experience Skilled Practice Nutrition Public Health Education and Promotion Social and Cultural Anthropology
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Cooking
Ethnography
Food Choice and Behavior
Food Systems
Sensory Experience
Skilled Practice
Nutrition
Public Health Education and Promotion
Social and Cultural Anthropology
spellingShingle Cooking
Ethnography
Food Choice and Behavior
Food Systems
Sensory Experience
Skilled Practice
Nutrition
Public Health Education and Promotion
Social and Cultural Anthropology
Carabello, Maria
Defining Food Agency: An Ethnographic Exploration of Home and Student Cooks in the Northeast
description According to popular and academic sources, home cooking is in decline. Nutrition and public health scholars concern that a loss of cooking abilities may diminish individuals' control over their food choices, thus contributing to poor health outcomes. Yet, there are still many unanswered questions. What skills, strategies, and knowledge sets are required to cook a meal on any given occasion? What capacity separates those who cook with ease from those who struggle to incorporate cooking into their daily routines? I propose that this difference is determined by an individual's capacity to employ a range of cognitive and technical skills related to meal preparation. I call this capacity 'food agency'. Drawing upon discourses of human agency developed in the social sciences, this food-specific theory considers how a home cook employs cognitive skills and sensory perceptions, while navigating'and shaping'various societal structures (e.g., schedule, budget, transportation, etc.) in the course of preparing a meal. Thus, to have food agency is to be empowered to act throughout the course of planning and preparing meals. To better understand the form and function of food agency in everyday contexts, this thesis has pursued two ethnographic explorations. The first study explored food agency from the vantage of routine performance by looking at the everyday practices of twenty-seven home cooks in the Northeastern United States. Data was collected through videotaping and observing the home cooks as they prepared typical dinnertime meals, followed-up with semi-structured interviews. The data has revealed a working model of the interrelated components seen as essential to consistent cooking practice, and thus to food agency'a conglomeration of skills, techniques, and strategies; structural and sensory guidelines; confidence and self-efficacy. All the home cooks were found to possess a basic scaffolding for food agency, yet the degree to which each had developed fluency in any given area was contingent upon personal experience. This supports the view that food agency is an actively acquired and dynamic capacity best understood as fluid rather than dichotomous. The second study explored food agency through guided progression, by following a cohort of eight college students at the University of Vermont as they learned how to cook during a semester-long food and culture course. Data was collected through videotaping the students as they cooked, and by interviewing them about their food behaviors and experiences at the beginning and end of the semester. The findings outlined the students' various trajectories as they progressed in many of the component areas involved in food agency'for example, skills, techniques, organizational strategies, sensory engagement, and a sense of individual and collective efficacy around meal preparation. While the longitudinal scope of this study was limited, these results suggest a need to develop similar curricula for hands-on cooking interventions that can be offered in a more diverse range of settings and contexts.
author Carabello, Maria
author_facet Carabello, Maria
author_sort Carabello, Maria
title Defining Food Agency: An Ethnographic Exploration of Home and Student Cooks in the Northeast
title_short Defining Food Agency: An Ethnographic Exploration of Home and Student Cooks in the Northeast
title_full Defining Food Agency: An Ethnographic Exploration of Home and Student Cooks in the Northeast
title_fullStr Defining Food Agency: An Ethnographic Exploration of Home and Student Cooks in the Northeast
title_full_unstemmed Defining Food Agency: An Ethnographic Exploration of Home and Student Cooks in the Northeast
title_sort defining food agency: an ethnographic exploration of home and student cooks in the northeast
publisher ScholarWorks @ UVM
publishDate 2015
url http://scholarworks.uvm.edu/graddis/453
http://scholarworks.uvm.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1452&context=graddis
work_keys_str_mv AT carabellomaria definingfoodagencyanethnographicexplorationofhomeandstudentcooksinthenortheast
_version_ 1718433327242805248