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Fast-Food Kids - French Fries, Lunch Lines, and Social Ties (Paperback)
Loot Price: R657
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Fast-Food Kids - French Fries, Lunch Lines, and Social Ties (Paperback)
Series: Critical Perspectives on Youth
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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2018 Morris Rosenberg Award, DC Sociological Society In recent
years, questions such as "what are kids eating?" and "who's feeding
our kids?" have sparked a torrent of public and policy debates as
we increasingly focus our attention on the issue of childhood
obesity. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates
that while 1 in 3 American children are either overweight or obese,
that number is higher for children living in concentrated poverty.
Enduring inequalities in communities, schools, and homes affect
young people's access to different types of food, with real
consequences in life choices and health outcomes. Fast-Food Kids
sheds light on the social contexts in which kids eat, and the
broader backdrop of social change in American life, demonstrating
why attention to food's social meaning is important to effective
public health policy, particularly actions that focus on behavioral
change and school food reforms. Through in-depth interviews and
observation with high school and college students, Amy L. Best
provides rich narratives of the everyday life of youth,
highlighting young people's voices and perspectives and the places
where they eat. The book provides a thorough account of the role
that food plays in the lives of today's youth, teasing out the many
contradictions of food as a cultural object-fast food portrayed as
a necessity for the poor and yet, reviled by upper-middle class
parents; fast food restaurants as one of the few spaces that kids
can claim and effectively 'take over' for several hours each day;
food corporations spending millions each year to market their food
to kids and to lobby Congress against regulations; schools
struggling to deliver healthy food young people will actually eat,
and the difficulty of arranging family dinners, which are known to
promote family cohesion and stability. A conceptually-driven,
ethnographic account of youth and the places where they eat,
Fast-Food Kids examines the complex relationship between youth
identity and food consumption, offering answers to those
straightforward questions that require crucial and comprehensive
solutions.
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