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Generational positions at a family dinner: Food morality and social order

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 September 2011

Karin Aronsson
Affiliation:
Department of Child and Youth Studies, Stockholm University, SE-106 91 Stockholm, [email protected]
Lucas Gottzén
Affiliation:
Department of Social Work, Linköping University, SE-581 83 Linköping, [email protected]

Abstract

This article concerns generation and food morality, drawing on video recordings of dinners in Swedish middle-class families. A detailed analysis of affect displays during one family dinner extends prior work on food morality (Ochs, Pontecorvo, & Fasulo 1996; Grieshaber 1997; Bourdieu 2003; Wiggins 2004), documenting ways in which participants may shift between distinct generational positions with respect to affects and food morality (from “irresponsible child” to caretaker positions). In our recordings, an elder sibling is shifting between a series of contrasting affective stances (Ochs & Schieffelin 1989; M. Goodwin 2006; Stivers 2008), linked to generational positions along an implicit age continuum: positioning himself, at one end of the continuum, as his young brother's accomplice, and at the other as an adult, a serious guardian of food morality. This study shows that generational positions are not fixed, but are positions adopted as parts of language socialization and interactional events. (Generational positions, caretaker positions, social age, affective stances, alignments, negotiations, food morality, language socialization, family life, dinnertime)*

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2011

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