2013
DOI: 10.1177/1469540513480162
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Feeding the ‘organic child’: Mothering through ethical consumption

Abstract: In this article, we examine the gendering of ethical food discourse by focusing on the ideal of the 'organic child'. Drawing from qualitative focus groups and interviews with Canadian mothers of various class backgrounds, we find that the organic child reflects the intersecting ideals of motherhood and ethical food discourse, whereby 'good' mothers are those who preserve their children's purity and protect the environment through conscientious food purchases. Women in our study express the desire to nurture th… Show more

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Cited by 191 publications
(202 citation statements)
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References 52 publications
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“…I highlight these shifting meanings as well as inter-and intrafamily nuances in the Findings section on middle-SES families. Another important point of variation was between mothers and fathers, consistent with scholarship underscoring the importance of food work to motherhood and a core part of maternal labor and identity (DeVault 1991;Cairns et al 2013). I attend to this varation in the Findings section examining high-SES families.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 58%
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“…I highlight these shifting meanings as well as inter-and intrafamily nuances in the Findings section on middle-SES families. Another important point of variation was between mothers and fathers, consistent with scholarship underscoring the importance of food work to motherhood and a core part of maternal labor and identity (DeVault 1991;Cairns et al 2013). I attend to this varation in the Findings section examining high-SES families.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 58%
“…Scholarship examining the origins of these disparities highlights important structural determinants of diet, including differential access to healthy that mothers should spend extensive time and energy cultivating children and tending to their needs (Hayes 1998). As the stakes around feeding have been raised, mothers have come to be largely viewed as personally responsible for feeding their children "healthy" food and protecting them against "unhealthy" influences (Cook 2009;Zivkovic et al 2010;Cairns et al 2013). Research shows that many mothers feel that they fall short of such ideals, with some even seeing the flaws inherent in these discourses.…”
Section: Background Socioeconomic Status Families and Dietmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Women often feel guilty when they are unable to meet normative food provisioning ideals (DeVault 1991;Avakian and Haber, 2005;Blake et al 2009;Cairns et al 2013). AFN participants often aim to engage in more from scratch food provisioning, rather than utilizing processed or convenience foods (Murdoch and Miele 2004;Little et al 2009).…”
Section: The Negative Consequences Of Gender Inequality In Food Provimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ethical eating is another means of marking class distinctions through food: fair trade, sustainable, locally produced, humane, organic (Cairns et al, 2013;Elliott, 2013;Guthman, 2003;Johnston et al, 2011;Sassatelli & Davolio, 2010). Not only are such products more costly, they also often require more effort and travel time to obtain (Kriwy & Mecking, 2012).…”
Section: Food As a Site Of Class Distinctionsmentioning
confidence: 99%