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Making Dinner: How American Home Cooks Produce and Make Meaning Out of the Evening Meal

Posted By: Underaglassmoon
Making Dinner: How American Home Cooks Produce and Make Meaning Out of the Evening Meal

Making Dinner: How American Home Cooks Produce and Make Meaning Out of the Evening Meal
Bloomsbury Academic | English | 2019 | ISBN-10: 1474252559 | 240 pages | PDF | 2.68 MB

by Roblyn Rawlins (Author), David Livert (Author)

With a vast selection of foods and thousands of recipes to choose from, how do home cooks in America decide what to cook – and what does their cooking mean to them?

Answering this question, Making Dinner is an empirical study of home cooking in the United States. Drawing on a combination of research methods, which includes in-depth interviews with over 50 cooks and cooking journals documenting over 300 home-cooked dinners, Roblyn Rawlins and David Livert explore how American home cooks think and feel about themselves, food, and cooking. Their findings reveal distinct types of cook-the family-first cook, the traditional cook, and the keen cook -and demonstrate how personal identities, family relationships, ideologies of gender and parenthood, and structural constraints all influence what ends up on the plate.

Rawlins and Livert reveal research that fills the data gap on practices of home cooking in everyday life. This is an important contribution to fields such as food studies, health and nutrition, sociology, social psychology, anthropology, gender studies, and American studies

Review
“This topic is relevant and understudied, and the authors address it here with an accessible writing style.” ―Shelley Koch, Emory and Henry College, USA

“Very little has been written about what people actually do with food rather than the discourses and myths that surround 'cooking' or the 'family meal'. This book overcomes this with empirical research on 'home cooking' combined with academic analysis and with reference to the relevant literature. A very well written and convincing book.” ―Wendy Wills, University of Hertfordshire, UK

“Adding to the unduly sparse literature on meals, this book valuably presents further evidence that eating out is not eclipsing eating at home and that cooking skills are not being lost, simply changing.” ―Anne Murcott, SOAS, University of London, UK

About the Author
Roblyn Rawlins is Professor of Sociology at The College of New Rochelle, USA.

David Livert is Associate Professor of Psychology at Pennsylvania State University, Lehigh Valley, USA