2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2015.01.026
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Short horizons and obesity futures: Disjunctures between public health interventions and everyday temporalities

Abstract: a b s t r a c tThis paper examines the spatio-temporal disjuncture between 'the future' in public health obesity initiatives and the embodied reality of eating. Drawing upon ethnographic fieldwork in a disadvantaged community in South Australia (August 2012eJuly 2014), we argue that the future oriented discourses of managing risk employed in obesity prevention programs have limited relevance to the immediacy of poverty, contingencies and survival that mark people's day to day lives. Extending Bourdieu's positi… Show more

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Cited by 85 publications
(78 citation statements)
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References 28 publications
(25 reference statements)
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“…As ethnographic work in low income areas has shown, mothers’ food practices can be a painstaking process of minimising food budgets (by choosing foods that are filling and unlikely to spoil), providing foods acceptable to husbands and children (for whom popular “junk” foods can provide social acceptance and gratification), and reducing the time and energy devoted to preparing food (by choosing convenience meals) . As well, “junk” foods can provide momentary pleasures and reduce stress arising from conflicts with children, and are an instrument used to cope with the stress of financial precarity . There are therefore a complex set of motivations stemming from mothers’ balancing of caring responsibilities (more so in single parent households) with scarce time and financial resources that converge to outweigh health concerns in the provision of food in families from low socio‐economic conditions.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As ethnographic work in low income areas has shown, mothers’ food practices can be a painstaking process of minimising food budgets (by choosing foods that are filling and unlikely to spoil), providing foods acceptable to husbands and children (for whom popular “junk” foods can provide social acceptance and gratification), and reducing the time and energy devoted to preparing food (by choosing convenience meals) . As well, “junk” foods can provide momentary pleasures and reduce stress arising from conflicts with children, and are an instrument used to cope with the stress of financial precarity . There are therefore a complex set of motivations stemming from mothers’ balancing of caring responsibilities (more so in single parent households) with scarce time and financial resources that converge to outweigh health concerns in the provision of food in families from low socio‐economic conditions.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Focusing here on health promotion, Crawford argues: The logic of pleasure -the propensity to immediately satisfy desires -is apparent in the accounts of participants in the study presented here, and it is the classed aspects of this which we seek to address in this paper. Our work shares similarities with Warin et al's (2015) study exploring how obese individuals oriented themselves towards a national anti-obesity campaign in Australia. Drawing on findings from an ethnographic study in disadvantaged communities, the authors use Bourdieu's (2000) insights about the temporal orientations to practice in order to advance the idea of 'short horizons' to conceptualise the ways in which future-oriented discourses around managing risk, which are features of public health campaigns, have only limited relevance to the immediacies of poverty, contingency and survival that mark disadvantaged individuals' lives.…”
Section: From Precarity To Discordant Pleasurementioning
confidence: 85%
“…In their emphasis on the pleasures to be gained from the immediacy of food consumption in the context of material lack, Warin et al's (2015), study contains useful parallels. Their argument is that participants' short horizons conflicted with a more synoptic and future-oriented public health perspective and this habitus was shaped by the embodied realities of unemployment, poverty and survival.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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