A healthy diet: British newspaper narratives in the 1920s

Q2 Arts and Humanities
P. Lyon, E. Kautto
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

ABSTRACT The early years of twentieth-century Britain were a transitional period for the way that food was understood. Diet adequacy was now being increasingly thought of as not simply a matter of the quantity of food but the qualities that food needed to have to sustain optimum health. A number of ‘fad diet’ books were circulating and proposed what readers should eat or avoid, and even how to eat. Science, meanwhile, was making progress with the identification of vitamins and these were added to the discourse. Newspapers in the 1920s had an important communication role in the struggle to separate dietary fact from fiction and this study examines how they represented ideas to their readers. Rather than giving a voice to ‘fad diets’, press stories endorsed the ‘common sense’ of normal varied diets although these could be socially and economically variable. Using fad ridicule and other techniques, as well as the reported opinion from well-known medical figures, newspapers emerge as responsible intermediaries in the transition .
健康饮食:20世纪20年代英国报纸的叙述
20世纪早期的英国是人们对食物理解方式的过渡时期。现在越来越多的人认为,饮食充足性不仅是食物数量的问题,而且是维持最佳健康所需的食物质量的问题。许多“时尚饮食”书籍流传开来,建议读者应该吃什么或避免吃什么,甚至如何吃。与此同时,科学在对维生素的识别方面取得了进展,这些也被纳入了讨论范围。20世纪20年代的报纸在将饮食事实与虚构区分开来的斗争中发挥了重要的沟通作用,本研究考察了它们如何向读者表达想法。新闻报道并没有为“时尚饮食”发声,而是认可了正常多样饮食的“常识”,尽管这些饮食在社会和经济上可能是可变的。报纸利用时尚嘲讽和其他技巧,以及知名医学人士的报道意见,在这一转变中扮演了负责任的中介角色。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
History of Retailing and Consumption
History of Retailing and Consumption Arts and Humanities-History
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
3
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