Titel
Food consumption, habitus and the embodiment of social change: Making class and doing gender in urban Vietnam
Abstract
This article draws on Bourdieu’s concept of habitus as a means to analyse social distinction and change in terms of class and gender through the lens of food consumption. By focusing on urban Vietnam, this qualitative study looks into the daily practices of food consumption, dieting and working on the body as specific means to enact ideal body types. Economically booming Vietnam has attracted growing investment capital in the fields of body and beauty industries and food retail. After decades of food insecurity, urban consumers find themselves manoeuvring in between growing food and lifestyle options, a nutrition transition, and contradicting demands on the consumer to both indulge and restrain themselves. Taking this dynamic urban context as its point of departure and adopting an intersectional perspective, this article assesses how eating, dieting and body performance are applied in terms of making class and doing gender. It shows that the growing urban landscape of food and body-centric industries facilitates new possibilities for distinction, dependent not only on economic capital but on bodily and cultural capital also, and furthermore, how social habitus regarding food–body relationships are gendered and interlaced with class privilege.
Stichwort
embodimentfoodgenderhabitussocial change
Objekt-Typ
Sprache
Englisch [eng]
Erschienen in
Titel
The Sociological Review
Band
69
Ausgabe
3
ISSN
0038-0261
Erscheinungsdatum
2021
Seitenanfang
681
Seitenende
701
Publication
SAGE Publications
Projekt
Kod / Identifikator
P27438
Erscheinungsdatum
2021
Zugänglichkeit
Rechteangabe
© The Author(s) 2021

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