{"title":"The ‘Confessional’ Voice in Food Journalism: Decentring Narratives in the Whetstone Radio Collective","authors":"Lucía Vodanovic, Janani Venkateswaran","doi":"10.3390/journalmedia4030059","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This article discusses the use of personal narratives in food media and journalism with a particular focus on podcasting. It situates the research amongst the abundance of lived experiences both in food content and in podcasting, two spaces that have been regarded as providers of the intimacy required to challenge impartiality practices in journalism. Given that the growth of podcasting has arguably failedto include enough non-mainstream voices, our primary research is based on four series of the Whetstone Radio Collective, a media organisation that aims to tell the stories of marginalised communities. Using content and thematic analysis, it establishes that the innovative use of first-person narratives of the hosts—who are overwhelming people of colour and embody stories of migration and displacement that mirror the food stories—is accompanied by conventional journalistic sourcing of experts who are already established voices based in the Global North. A recentring agenda is most obvious when it reclaims histories such as that of black farmers in the US, when it situates the consumption of foods as part of the global trade that drove the colonial project, or when it delves into and criticises foodways such as the social architecture of kitchens.","PeriodicalId":17629,"journal":{"name":"Journalism and Media","volume":"11 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-08-24","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journalism and Media","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.3390/journalmedia4030059","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
This article discusses the use of personal narratives in food media and journalism with a particular focus on podcasting. It situates the research amongst the abundance of lived experiences both in food content and in podcasting, two spaces that have been regarded as providers of the intimacy required to challenge impartiality practices in journalism. Given that the growth of podcasting has arguably failedto include enough non-mainstream voices, our primary research is based on four series of the Whetstone Radio Collective, a media organisation that aims to tell the stories of marginalised communities. Using content and thematic analysis, it establishes that the innovative use of first-person narratives of the hosts—who are overwhelming people of colour and embody stories of migration and displacement that mirror the food stories—is accompanied by conventional journalistic sourcing of experts who are already established voices based in the Global North. A recentring agenda is most obvious when it reclaims histories such as that of black farmers in the US, when it situates the consumption of foods as part of the global trade that drove the colonial project, or when it delves into and criticises foodways such as the social architecture of kitchens.
本文讨论了个人叙事在食品媒体和新闻中的应用,特别关注播客。它将研究置于食物内容和播客中丰富的生活经验中,这两个空间被认为是挑战新闻公正实践所需的亲密关系的提供者。鉴于播客的增长可能没有包括足够多的非主流声音,我们的主要研究是基于wheetstone Radio Collective的四个系列,这是一个旨在讲述边缘化社区故事的媒体组织。通过内容和主题分析,它确立了主持人的第一人称叙事的创新使用——他们是压倒性的有色人种,体现了移民和流离失所的故事,反映了食物故事——伴随着传统的新闻来源,专家们已经在全球北方建立了声音。当它回顾美国黑人农民的历史时,当它将食物消费置于推动殖民项目的全球贸易的一部分时,或者当它深入研究和批评食物方式(如厨房的社会结构)时,重新聚焦的议程是最明显的。