Record Details

DISPOSABLE COMMENSALITY: STRATEGIES FOR THE SELECTION OF MEALS IN THE OFFICE

EUREKA: Social and Humanities

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Field Value
 
Title DISPOSABLE COMMENSALITY: STRATEGIES FOR THE SELECTION OF MEALS IN THE OFFICE
 
Creator Boragnio, Aldana; National Council of Scientific and Technical Research (CONICET)
Research Institute Gino Germani (IIGG)
Universidad de Buenos Aires (UBA)
 
Subject food practices; eating practices; commensality; body; emotions
 
Description In order to understand the act of eating it becomes necessary to place it within a determinate society, time and space, which are structured by concrete practices and organized by specific rules and norms. Knowledge about food consumption within the working space is relevant because the food practices deployed during office hours are linked to the relation between energy use and the replenishment of energies necessaries for the working tasks.
These strategies of selection of meals by the women interviewed were organized in the articulation between the available physical space, the body and the available time for eating. These women seek to eat in the fastest time possible and therefore consume “fast food” and “light” food. At this way, a “disposable commensality” is structured as a way of everyday eating in the office, where the relation heavy/fast organizes the food practices in contrast to the body used as a recipient.
The data for this article is part of a wider research in which I seek to describe the everyday eating practices of working women within the spaces of national public offices, in relation to their eating and commensality. The article begins with (a) the exposition of the bases connecting bodies/emotions with eating; b) present the meals selected daily and the strategies for the selections of these meals as explained by the women and c) d) explain the relation between food/body/space.
 
Publisher Company "Scientific Route"
 
Contributor
 
Date 2018-10-01
 
Type info:eu-repo/semantics/article
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion


 
Format application/pdf
 
Identifier http://eu-jr.eu/social/article/view/724
10.21303/2504-5571.2018.00724
 
Source EUREKA: Social and Humanities; No 5 (2018); 16-28
EUREKA: Social and Humanities; No 5 (2018); 16-28
 
Language eng
 
Relation http://eu-jr.eu/social/article/view/724/703
 
Rights Copyright (c) 2018 Aldana Boragnio
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0