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Children

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... bureaucracies of national and local government, ... And then for dinner he has chicken nuggets and chips every day. ... Family childhoods & junk food ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Children


1
Childrens Food? Reflections on Politics,
Policy and Practices
  • Prof. Allison James
  • University of Sheffield.

2
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3
Aims
  • To explore childrens food as a cultural
    construct that marks adult - child differences
  • To examine implications for theorising
    generational relations in late modernity
  • To situate the concept of childrens food in
    wider policital/policy discourses

4
Generational relations
  • Alanen (2001)
  • the two generational categories of children and
    adults are recurrently produced through
    relations of connection, and interaction, of
    interdependence ( 2001 21).
  • Differential exercise of power
  • Generational relations are part of the
    biographies of families

5
Childrens food in England
  • Growing separation adults and children reflected
    in different foods
  • nursery food
  • Mennell (1985)
  • a matter of making them eat what was good for
    them, whether they liked it or not. At worst,
    making them eat food to which they actually felt
    an aversion was seen as a necessary part of
    breaking the childs peevish will (1985296).

6
Victorian childrens diets -class analysis
  • ..the consequences for children of eating
    complex and too solid forms of food were the
    sick headaches and bilious attacks which pursue
    their victim through half a lifetime, to be
    exchanged for gout or worse (Thompson cited in
    Mennell 1985297).
  • the best way in which to give meat to girls is
    in the form of pain roast or boiled joints.
    Elabourate entrees, rich and stimulating sauces,
    and the like, may be left to temp the jaded
    palates if their elders. Digestive troubles may
    ensure when over-rich food is given ( cited in
    Mennel 1985 297)

7
Food and English childhood?
  • Children different from adults - food
    prohibitions prescriptions
  • Health focus on children as becomings
  • Later trickle down effects - school meal system
    1930s
  • Children as the nations future
  • through their everyday involvement in childrens
    lives, welfare bureaucracies of national and
    local government, and of philanthropy, imposed
    what, to all intent and purposes, were certain
    class dominated and expert formulated concepts
    of childhood on the general population (
    Hendrick 1997 50)

8
English Childrens food - 21st century?
  • Index of generational relations in England
  • Family pubs c.f. adult restaurants
  • Different, specialised menu for children
  • Fast food, highly processed

9
Impact of food technology
  • Development of industrial food enables new foods
    and new prescriptions/ prohibitions
  • highly processed
  • marketed packaged
  • Fast food/junk food
  • New index of adult-child relations
  • New index of social class relations

10
Food as universal index of generation?
  • France other European societies little in
    evidence
  • Generation indexed in other ways
  • CF
  • Hunter-gather societies
  • Childrens food is wild food
  • children, who have to perform tasks outside the
    home and the village and must cater for
    themselves, have a broad knowledge of the
    potential foods and how to prepare them (de
    Garine 1993165)
  • Prohibited for adults
  • shameful, a backward symbol of poverty and
    unbecoming to an individual attending school, an
    urbanite or the members of Christian and Muslim
    high religions (de Garine 1993165).

11
Sweets as childrens food (James 1979)
  • Kets - rubbish, rotten carcasse
  • Kets- cheap sweets
  • Kets as inedible
  • Kets eaten in-between meals
  • Kets food controlled by children, not eaten by
    adults

12
English Childrens food - 21st century?
  • Moral panic
  • Recent policy initiatives - childhood obesity
  • 5 a day
  • School dinner reforms
  • Advertising bans/ restrictions
  • Surveillance control

13
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14
Prohibitions..
  • 'things like Sunny D and all those things that
    are advertised, is aimed at them, that is not
    particularly good for them really. Cheese
    strings and those things that they think are
    marvellous and really they're not. They'll have
    seen an advert on TV and thought that it looked
    good and can we give it a try. And, you know,
    sometimes I would try it but very often not
    really.'

15
Prohibitions.
  • She never bought me Dairylea dunkers. Ive asked
    her and asked her when I was a kid and all she
    said was no
  • Id always prefer like a chocolate biscuit but I
    will not be allowed. Or coke and crisps.
  • I asked for chocolate spread and she didnt get
    it.

16
Junk food childrens food
  • Junk food is not proper food
  • Dairylea Dunkers, cheese strings. Theyre always
    asking for those. I never every buy them. I
    dont know why they bother asking really.
  • Junk food as new social problem
  • Childrens childhoods as new social problem
  • Parenting under surveillance

17
Food, power generational relations
  • Because when I go to the shop I always like take
    stuff. Take it all put it in the trolley she
    picks it out pulls it out of the trolley. Its
    quite a nightmare to go with her... what sort of
    things do you like to put in the trolley?
    Biscuits, junk foods She just puts healthy food
    back in. Its like get the healthy food out and
    the junk food in.
  • 'I'm not allowed to buy what I really -- I'm not
    allowed to buy loads of junk food, my dad doesn't
    let me, like loads of chocolate, I'm not allowed
    to buy chocolate, loads -- and sweets. Like
    maybe one, like, you know, packet

18
Childrens food junk food
  • If my friends come we have a lot more junk food.
    My Mum makes like chips and burgers and Im not
    really into that. But most of my friends, a lot
    of my friends are. When Paul comes..For lunch he
    has a ham sandwich just plain with no butter
    'cause he dunt like butter. And then for dinner
    he has chicken nuggets and chips every day.
    ...My Mum usually makes some chips and burger
    and things but he doesnt like normal burgers.
    He has to get these special prime beef ones or
    someat.

19
Family childhoods junk food
  • you get a bit slack, dont you, and start doing
    things to cut corners and treats to keep em
    quiet and so the rest of them have had more junk
    than the oldest I suppose.

20
Different families, different childhoods
  • 'his mum would give it to 'em and say okay, you
    can have that'.... 'His brother wanted pasta and
    he wanted pizza and I went with whatever she was
    making'.
  • 'it's really weird cause he has power over
    everything in his, at home. If his mum will go,
    his mums like so giving in to everything, his
    mum will go "Oh, shall we have like chocolate ice
    cream for dessert". He'll say, Lennyll say,
    "No, I really want the caramel thing" . His
    mumll go "Oh, you can have caramel, you can have
    chocolate" and it's really like kind of
    cushioning .in like foam'.

21
Different families, different childhoods
  • 'I tend to do more children friendly food when
    somebody's coming over. But the rest of the time
    we tend to eat more sort of adult type meals but
    if there's a friend coming over then I will try
    and make it a bit more child friendly..kind of
    like sausages and, you know, maybe pizza or
    something
  • 'most of the time he would pick the sort of
    healthy option but given the choice, every now
    and then, I think he'd have the junkie option
  • one of the reasons why I would rather that he had
    packed lunch really. Cause I think given a free
    choice he might just choose the not so healthier
    options'

22
Surveillance control
  • Maintaining adult-child distinctions
  • when my mum and dad do shopping and they come
    back and they say Those are mine. I bought them
    for me. Then I wouldnt touch them. Id ask
    before if I wanted to have one (girl)
  • We do have this top cupboard which has got like
    nice sweet things in. Maybe some crisps and
    chocolate but they may be for special occasions.
    But like its not only for the grown ups, but
    only the grown ups can go and eat. Like get,
    bring it down, or wed have to ask permission.
    (girl)

23
Circumventing control.
  • And she doesnt get us the nice biscuits. She
    gets the mud biscuits as we call them - the
    biscuits that dont taste very nice, so we dont
    eat them (boy)
  • my favourite chocolates Bournville and shed
    got a big bar of it in the fridge which is really
    annoying so every now and then I can, like, Ill
    say Ive just had a piece of fruit or yoghurt,
    please can I have a bit of chocolate.

24
Child(ish) families? Junk families?
  • We like pizza, I mean, we like what you call junk
    foods, we like burgers , we like hot dogs, we
    like pizzas.

25
Other families improper foodimproper families
-Sheilas story
  • we were sat next to a table of two adults and
    three children who lets say were not smallthey
    werent obese but they werent small .
  • me and Tim enjoyed the salad just as much as the
    pizza. We only had two pieces of pizza each and
    filled the plate up 'cause theres loads of
    different really nice looking fresh salads.
  • all five of em did it and they went up again and
    filled their plates up 'cause their dad had told
    em it was a buffet Yeah, he says, Ive paid a
    lot for this. So get up there and..

26
My family proper family proper food Sheilas
story contd.
  • I know for a fact that they would, mine would
    have chosen the salad they wouldnt just, I
    couldnt think of anything more disgusting than
    sitting having to eat plate fulls of pizza. But
    that was obviously a message from their parents.
  • I know if they go out tomorrow for their dinner
    I know if there was a choice between Burger
    King, McDonalds or a subway theyll go to the
    subway sandwich shop. I know they would. They,
    they dont, it would be torture for them to go
    and eat McDonalds and things like that.

27
Proper families display families properly -
Shelias story concludes
  • 'at the end of the day you're in control, you are
    the parent, you've got the purse. You make the
    decisions and if kids pester you for a chocolate
    bar, just say no. The three and four-year-olds
    are getting their own way about what they want to
    eat and you're letting them down by letting them.
    Just say no and tell them why. And if they
    pester that much say, "Well, no you can't have a
    chocolate bar but go and choose a piece of fruit
    that you'd like." There's always a way round it
    but I think some of them are so hassled they just
    give in for quietness and they're not doing them
    any favours at all. And it's a load of crap that
    the kids get what they want to eat cause they've
    pestered for it.'

28
Conclusion
  • Junk food- junk childhood.a cultural paradox?
  • Technological changes map out child-adult
    distinctions via developments in childrens
    food
  • Childrens food symbolic of childrens
    separateness
  • Childhood obesity an unintended consequence of of
    such conceptual distinctions?
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