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To Eat or Not to Eat Meat - How Vegetarian Dietary Choices Influence Our Social Lives (Paperback)
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To Eat or Not to Eat Meat - How Vegetarian Dietary Choices Influence Our Social Lives (Paperback)
Series: Rowman & Littlefield Studies in Food and Gastronomy
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Increasingly, people are shifting to vegetarian, plant-based, or
vegan diets. This shift is having profound effects on our social
interactions, and this is the focus of this book. Becoming a
vegetarian or vegan involves more than just changing your diet. It
can change how you socially and emotionally connect with family,
friends and the broader community, shape your outlook on life, and
open up new worlds and contacts. It can also lead to uncomfortable
situations, if dietary choices involving a rejection of meat are
read by others as an ethical and moral judgement on mainstream
dietary choices. This book adopts an innovative narrative approach,
and draws on stories across the globe to consider how the food
choices we make in our everyday lives can lead to complex, and
sometimes life changing, social consequences. The narratives cover
a range of topics, including the moral reasons behind some
individuals' decision to change their diets, the religious or
ecological considerations, and the potential health and social
ramifications. To date, the social consequences of selecting a
plant-based diet have been sorely overlooked in favour of texts
that have documented the benefits of such diets, and usually focus
on health, animal welfare and/or environmental issues, with the aim
of persuading readers to give up meat, and change to a 'healthy'
and/or 'sustainable' diet. Cultural studies texts considering
vegetarianism or veganism have typically targeted academic
audiences with analyses of how identity is constructed through food
and dietary choices. In contrast, this book offers a unique window
onto how our social lives are implicated in our food choices, and
is critical in understanding the importance of diet as embedded in
complex social processes.
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