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Feeding China's Little Emperors - Food, Children, and Social Change (Paperback, Revised)
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Feeding China's Little Emperors - Food, Children, and Social Change (Paperback, Revised)
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Total price: R611
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Until recently, Chinese children ate what their parents fed them
and were not permitted to influence, much less dictate, their own
diet. The situation today is radically different, especially in
cities and prosperous villages, as a result of a notable increase
in people's income and a fast-growing consumer culture. Chinese
children, with spending money in their pockets, arguably have
become the most determined consumers--usually of snack foods, soft
drinks, and fast foods from such Western outlets as McDonald's and
Kentucky Fried Chicken. With many children, especially pampered
only children, now controlling not only their own but also their
family's choice of staples, snacks, and restaurants, a major
reformation in the concept of childhood is occurring in China.
This book focuses on how the transformation of children's food
habits, the result of China's transition to a market economy and
its integration into the global economic arena, has changed the
intimate relationship of childhood, parenthood, and family life.
Since the early 1980s, a drastic decline in fertility and a steady
rise in family income have been accompanied by a profusion of new
products successfully advertised on television and in other media
as "children's food." This commercialization of children's diet has
become so pervasive that even children in remote villages surprise
their parents with demands for particular trendy foods and soft
drinks. Many Chinese parents, reared very differently, anxiously
question whether their children are eating well and growing up
healthy.
The contributors to this book, drawn from the fields of
anthropology, sociology, political economy, and nutrition, examine
a wide variety of topics: the effects of new foods on children's
health; the consumption of "prestige" foods; the social
implications of commercialized children's food on a Chinese Islamic
community; the adaptations of Kentucky Fried Chicken in response to
indigenous fast-food companies; the generation gap in attitudes
toward food consumption; the significance of religion and nutrition
in feeding and healing children; the creation of baby-friendly
hospitals to promote breastfeeding and scientific childcare
methods; the special role of nationalism and traditional Chinese
medicine in children's food production; and the business promotion
of having fun as an aspect of eating well.
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