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Long-held associations between women, home, food, and cooking are beginning to unravel as, in a growing number of households, men are taking on food and cooking responsibilities. At the same time, men’s public foodwork continues to gain attention in the media and popular culture. The first of its kind, Food, Masculinities and Home focuses specifically on food in relation to how homemaking practices shape masculine identities and transform meanings of ‘home’. The international, multidisciplinary contributors explore questions including how food practices shape masculinity and notions of home, and vice versa; the extent to which this gender shift challenges existing gender hierarchies; and how masculinities are being reshaped by the growing presence of men in kitchens and food-focused spaces.With ever-growing interest in both food and gender studies, this is a must-read for students and researchers in food studies, gender studies, cultural studies, sociology, geography, anthropology, and related fields.
Michelle Szabo is Professor of Environmental Studies and Sociology at Sheridan College Institute of Technology and Advanced Learning, CanadaShelley Koch is Associate Professor of Sociology at Emory & Henry College, USA
List of TablesList of ContributorsSeries Preface: Why Home?Rosie Cox, Birkbeck, University of London, UK, and Victor Buchli, University College London, UKIntroductionShelley Koch, Emory & Henry College, USA, and Michelle Szabo, Sheridan College Institute of Technology and Advanced Learning, CanadaSection I: The Production of 'Masculinity' and 'Home' through Food: Empirical Studies of Masculinity and Home CookingChapter 1: Cooking up Manliness: A Practice-Based Approach to Men's At-Home Cooking and Attitudes Using Time-Use Diary DataSarah Daniels and Ignace Glorieux, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, BelgiumChapter 2: "Women Have a Gift for Cooking": Israeli Male Teachers' View of Domestic CookeryLiora Gvion and Dorit Patkin, The Kibbutizm College of Education, IsraelChapter 3: Transnational Domestic Masculinity: Japanese Men's Home Cooking in AustraliaIori Hamada, University of Melbourne, AustraliaChapter 4: Stumbling in the Kitchen: Exploring Masculinity, Latinicity and Belonging through Performative CookingMarcos D. Moldes, Simon Fraser University, CanadaChapter 5: From "The Missus used to cook" to "Get the recipe book and get stuck into it": Reconstructing Masculinities in Older MenLauren Williams, Griffith University, Australia, and John Germov, University of Newcastle, AustraliaChapter 6: Men's Foodwork in Food Systems: Social Representations of Masculinities and Cooking at HomeJeffrey Sobal, Cornell University, USASection II: Discourses of Men's and Boys' Home Cooking in Popular Culture and the MediaChapter 7: Cool Kids Cook: Girls and Boys in the Foodie KitchenElizabeth Fakazis, University of Wisconsin, USAChapter 8: “Wish I was a better boy. Nothing pertikeler for tea”: Food, Boyhood, and Masculine Appetite in Nineteenth-Century Women’s Coming of Age NovelsSamantha Christensen, University of Alberta, CanadaChapter 9: “If you want to, you can do it!”: Home Cooking and Masculinity Makeover in Le Chef Contre-Attaque Jonatan Leer, University of Copenhagen, DenmarkChapter 10: Kitchen Mishaps: Performances of Masculine Domesticity in American Comedy Films Fabio Parasecoli, The New School, USAChapter 11: Chefs at Home? Masculinities on Offer in Celebrity Chef Cookbooks Alexandra Rodney and Josée Johnston, University of Toronto, CanadaChapter 12: Don’t Try This At Home: Men on TV, Women in the Kitchen Ellen Cox, Transylvania University, USABibliographyIndex
As a whole then, the book offers the building blocks scholars need to begin constructing new representations of gender, home and food. Editors and authors offer a review of what went before, a wealth of empirical data from many parts of the world, several original theoretical concepts that allow for the conceptualization of new food-based domestic masculinities and a range of research methods that could be emulated by other scholars in this field.”