加拿大大学课堂中的食物框架

Andrea Bombak, Michelle Adams, Sierra Garofalo, Constance Russell, Emma Robinson, Barbara Parker, Natalie Riediger, Erin Cameron
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引用次数: 0

摘要

有许多 "积极 "运动,如性积极和身体积极,影响着人们对性和身体的讨论,包括在 教育环境中的讨论。这些运动提供了替代性话语,挑战了将性行为和身体视为 "危险"、异常或 "其他 "的建构。鉴于食品经常被构建为 "危险",反映了人们对工业化食品生产的焦虑,以及 "不良 "食品对人类健康、外观和环境的影响,"食品积极性 "也有可能起到同样的作用。食品做法以及支持这些做法的话语是道德的象征,可能具有排斥性,加剧边缘化和不平等。另外,食品教学法也可以优先考虑包容性、多样性以及可持续的、有复原力的社区。中学后食品教育中流传的话语如何构建和支持与食品的积极关系?加拿大高等教育中有两个主要的、但基本上各自为政的领域,即营养科学和食品研究。本研究利用加拿大各地本科课程公开提供的教学大纲(n=97),调查了食品积极性是如何形成的。在营养科学中,食物积极性强调营养主义意识形态,即营养素的组成和数量可以加起来形成(未定义的)健康饮食。在食品研究领域,食品积极性与地方性、促进公平和文化敏感性方法有关。在这两个领域,"食物消极性 "也与 "致胖 "食物和系统有关,揭示了潜在的脂肪恐惧症。加强与 "脂肪研究 "的跨学科合作将有利于这两个领域制定更广泛、更具包容性的食物积极性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The framing of food in Canadian university classrooms
There are numerous “positivity” movements circulating such as sex positivity and body positivity that affect how sexuality and bodies are discussed, including in educational contexts. These movements have provided alternative discourses that challenge constructions of sexualities and bodies as “dangerous”, aberrant, or “other”. There is potential for “food positivity” to do the same given how food is frequently constructed as “risky”, reflecting anxieties about industrial food production and the impacts of “bad” food on human health, appearance, and the environment. Food practices, and the discourses that support them act as moral signifiers and can be exclusionary, exacerbating marginalization and inequities. Alternatively, food pedagogies can prioritize inclusion, diversity, and sustainable, resilient communities. How might the discourses that circulate in post-secondary food education construct and support positive relationships with food? Two major, and largely silo-ed, fields in Canadian higher education are Nutritional Sciences and Food Studies. Using publicly available syllabi (n=97) from undergraduate courses across Canada, this study investigated how food positivity is being enacted. In Nutritional Sciences, food positivity emphasizes nutritionism ideology whereby the composition and quantity of nutrients can add up to an (undefined) healthy diet. In Food Studies, food positivity is associated with local, equity-promoting, and culturally-sensitive approaches. In both fields, “food negativity” also appears in relation to “obesogenic” foods and systems, revealing an underlying fatphobia. Greater transdisciplinary collaboration with Fat Studies would benefit both fields in enacting a broader and more inclusive food positivity.  
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