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This book explores the multifaceted relationship between food and food-practices, media and representations, and the politics of production and consumption. It examines the media spaces where the power and problems of Big Food are contested, and simultaneously explore the ways that Big Food has reacted to its myriad public sphere critics, offering strategies that include meaningful reform as well as outright co-optation. The collection takes as its starting point the increasingly articulated connections between food, media and politics, and explores these connections through a variety of case studies and theoretical resources. …mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This book explores the multifaceted relationship between food and food-practices, media and representations, and the politics of production and consumption. It examines the media spaces where the power and problems of Big Food are contested, and simultaneously explore the ways that Big Food has reacted to its myriad public sphere critics, offering strategies that include meaningful reform as well as outright co-optation. The collection takes as its starting point the increasingly articulated connections between food, media and politics, and explores these connections through a variety of case studies and theoretical resources.


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Autorenporträt
Michelle Phillipov is a lecturer in Media at the University of Adelaide, Australia. Her work explores how media's intensified interest in the provenance of food and the ethics of food production is shaping public debate, consumer politics, and media and food industry practices. Katherine Kirkwood is a PhD candidate at the Queensland University of Technology, Australia. Her research investigates popular culture's relationship with everyday Australian food culture and how media and cultural texts inform and shape Australians' approach to food, their culinary interests and concerns.