Eating Clean: Anti-Chinese Sugar Advertising and the Making of White Racial Purity in the Canadian Pacific

D. Belisle
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

ABSTRACT Between 1891 and 1914, western Canada’s largest sugar manufacturer – BC Sugar – constructed a racialized discourse of food cleanliness. This discourse argued that Chinese-made sugars were contaminated while Canadian-made sugars were clean. Through an analysis of this discourse, this article argues that BC Sugar constructed a purity/polluted binary that suggested that white consumers’ racial purity was threatened by Chinese-made sugars. It then links BC Sugar’s clean foods campaign to three broader trends. First, it illustrates that BC Sugar’s construction of pure versus polluted foods supported the effort to establish white supremacy in the Canadian Pacific. Second, it demonstrates that discourses of food purity enabled white settlers to construct bodily purity by the eating of so-called clean foods. Third, it argues that since contemporary discourses of food cleanliness rely on pure versus polluted metaphors, scholars must attend to the motivations driving today’s clean eating movement.
吃得干净:反华糖广告与加拿大太平洋地区白人种族纯洁的制造
摘要1891年至1914年间,加拿大西部最大的食糖制造商BC sugar构建了一个关于食品清洁的种族化话语。这篇文章认为,中国制造的糖受到了污染,而加拿大制造的糖是干净的。通过对这一话语的分析,本文认为BC Sugar构建了一个纯度/污染二元模型,表明白人消费者的种族纯度受到中国制造糖的威胁。然后,它将BC Sugar的清洁食品运动与三个更广泛的趋势联系起来。首先,它表明BC Sugar对纯食品与污染食品的构建支持了在加拿大太平洋地区建立白人至上主义的努力。其次,它表明,关于食物纯度的论述使白人定居者能够通过食用所谓的清洁食品来构建身体纯度。第三,它认为,由于当代关于食品清洁的论述依赖于纯粹与污染的隐喻,学者们必须关注推动当今清洁饮食运动的动机。
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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CiteScore
1.20
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0.00%
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