How Canadians communicate VI : : food promotion, consumption, and controversy / / edited by Charlene Elliott.

"Food nourishes the body, but our relationship with food extends far beyond our need for survival. We use food choices not only to express our personal tastes but also, and perhaps more importantly, to declare our affiliation with certain groups to the exclusion of others. Thanks to a newly glo...

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Superior document:How Canadians communicate ; VI
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Place / Publishing House:Edmonton, Alberta : : AU Press,, [2016]
©2016
Ottawa, Ontario : : Canadian Electronic Library,, 2016.
Year of Publication:2016
Language:English
Series:How Canadians communicate ; 6.
Physical Description:1 online resource (336 pages) :; digital, PDF file(s).
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245 0 0 |a How Canadians communicate VI :  |b food promotion, consumption, and controversy /  |c edited by Charlene Elliott. 
260 |b Athabasca University Press  |c 2016 
264 1 |a Edmonton, Alberta :  |b AU Press,  |c [2016] 
264 4 |c ©2016 
264 2 |a Ottawa, Ontario :  |b Canadian Electronic Library,  |c 2016. 
300 |a 1 online resource (336 pages) :  |b digital, PDF file(s). 
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490 1 |a How Canadians communicate ;  |v VI 
504 |a Includes bibliographical references and index. 
505 0 |a Introduction / Charlene Elliott -- PART i Food Promotion. 1 Communicating Food Quality: Food, Packaging, and Place / Charlene Elliott and Wayne McCready -- 2 The Food Retail Environment in Canada: Shaping What Canadians Eat and How They Communicate About Food / Jordan LeBel -- 3 Selling Nutrition: Current Directions in Food Fortification and Nutrition-Related Marketing / Valerie Tarasuk -- 4 Insider voice Edible Canada: The Growth of Culinary Tourism / Eric Pateman and Shannon King -- 
505 8 |a Part II Food and communication. 5 La cuisinière canadienne: The Cookbook as Communication / Ken Albala -- 6 The Dinner Party: Reworking Tradition Through Contemporary Performance / Jacqueline Botterill -- 7 Canadian Food Radio: Conjuring Nourishment for Canadians Out of Thin Air / Nathalie Cooke -- 8 Of Men and Cupcakes: Baking Identities on Food Network 1/ Irina D. Mihalache -- 9 insider voice Snapshots of a Canadian Cuisine / Elizabeth Baird -- 10 insider voice Everybody's a Critic: A Memoir / John Gilchrist -- 
505 8 |a Part III Food controversy. 11 Making the "Perfect Food" Safe: The Milk Pasteurization Debate / Catherine Carstairs, Paige Schell, and Sheilagh Quaile -- 12 Kraft Dinner(R) Unboxed: Rethinking Food Insecurity and Food / Melanie Rock -- 13 Hipster Hunters and the Discursive Politics of Food Hunting in Canada / Rebecca Carruthers Den Hoed -- 14 Lies, Damned Lies, and Locavorism: Bringing Some Truth in Advertising to the Canadian Local Food Debate / Pierre Desrochers -- 15 Communication, Crisis, and Contaminated Meat: A Tale of Two Food Scares / Charlene Elliott and Josh Greenberg -- 16 Canaries in the Supermarket: Moral Panic, Food Marketing and Children's Eating / Stephen Kline -- 17 "Death on a Plate": Communicating Food Fears in Modern North America / Harvey Levenstein. 
520 |a "Food nourishes the body, but our relationship with food extends far beyond our need for survival. We use food choices not only to express our personal tastes but also, and perhaps more importantly, to declare our affiliation with certain groups to the exclusion of others. Thanks to a newly global system of food production, however, coupled with rising concerns about the nutritional value of the foods we consume and the impact of our increasingly sedentary lifestyles, the modern foodscape has become remarkably difficult to navigate. A single food item may, for example, be labelled with health-related claims made by the manufacturer that do not dovetail with the information provided in the "Nutrition Facts" label. In the media sphere, the enormous amount of food-related advice provided by government agencies, assorted advocacy groups, diet books, and so on compete with efforts on the part of the food industry to sell their product and to respond to a consumer-driven desire for convenience. As a result, the topic of food has grown fraught, engendering sometimes acrimonious debates about what we should eat, and why. This volume is the latest to emerge from a series of workshops about the role of media in Canadian popular culture. By examining topics such as the values embedded in food advertising, the meaning of "organic" and "natural," the locavore movement, food tourism, dinner parties, food bank donations, the moral panic surrounding obesity, food crises, and fears about food safety, the contributors to this volume paint a rich, if at times disturbing, portrait of how food is represented, regulated, and consumed in Canada. We also hear from "food insiders"--bestselling cookbook author and food editor Elizabeth Baird, veteran restaurant reviewer and food writer John Gilchrist, executive chef and culinary tourism provider Eric Pateman--who provide valuable insights about the way that Canadians cook, eat, and experience food. The result is a thought-provoking look at food as a system of communication through which Canadians articulate cultural identity, personal values, and social class."--  |c Provided by publisher. 
546 |a English 
650 0 |a Food habits  |z Canada. 
650 0 |a Food  |z Social aspects  |z Canada. 
650 0 |a Food  |z Canada  |x Marketing. 
650 0 |a Food consumption  |z Canada. 
650 0 |a Food law and legislation  |z Canada. 
650 0 |a Communication and culture  |z Canada. 
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653 |a nutrition 
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653 |a dinner parties 
653 |a food labeling 
653 |a local food movement 
653 |a organic 
653 |a obesity 
653 |a dieting 
700 1 |a Elliott, Charlene,  |d 1971-  |e author,  |e editor. 
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