Food banks are a growing feature of austerity Britain. Despite this, little research has focused on the object central to their operations: the food they provision. In charting an attempt to “open” food bank parcels to greater scrutiny, this article highlights the need to take back taste from predominantly nutritionist framings of food. Drawing on recent work in more-than-representational and visceral geography, it is argued that taste must be understood as an embodied, sensorial and social phenomenon. However, this article highlights the ethico-political dilemmas that accompany such an undertaking, and the wider implications raised by studying the tastes of socially and economically marginalised groups. These tensions are explored through...
Existing discussions of food democracy focus on people’s freedom to choose healthy, sustainable, or ...
This editorial introduces a Special Issue on food practices and social inequality by outlining a dic...
Absorbing Fare examines the imaginative functions of food and ingestion within the discourses of dif...
This paper offers a critical reappraisal of the politics of food banking in the UK. Existing work ha...
This paper contributes to emerging geographical literature on what is here conceptualised as ‘actual...
Recent UK social policy has been dominated by welfare reform and austerity. This paper draws on empi...
Following the financial crisis of 2008 and years of subsequent austerity policies in the UK, food ba...
Drawing on ethnographic research with organisations redistributing wasted food, this paper explores ...
A qualitative analysis of the geographies of responsibility pertaining to the recently reported incr...
The authors gratefully acknowledge the support given by the British Academy for this research (gran...
This paper contributes to critical discussions of austerity by examining the constructions of scarci...
There is growing policy maker and public concern about current trends in food bank use in Scotland. ...
This chapter explores the apparently paradoxical phenomenon of foodie austerity in the British media...
This article investigates how culinary taste contributes to the formation of middle class identity i...
This article investigates how culinary taste contributes to the formation of middle class identity i...
Existing discussions of food democracy focus on people’s freedom to choose healthy, sustainable, or ...
This editorial introduces a Special Issue on food practices and social inequality by outlining a dic...
Absorbing Fare examines the imaginative functions of food and ingestion within the discourses of dif...
This paper offers a critical reappraisal of the politics of food banking in the UK. Existing work ha...
This paper contributes to emerging geographical literature on what is here conceptualised as ‘actual...
Recent UK social policy has been dominated by welfare reform and austerity. This paper draws on empi...
Following the financial crisis of 2008 and years of subsequent austerity policies in the UK, food ba...
Drawing on ethnographic research with organisations redistributing wasted food, this paper explores ...
A qualitative analysis of the geographies of responsibility pertaining to the recently reported incr...
The authors gratefully acknowledge the support given by the British Academy for this research (gran...
This paper contributes to critical discussions of austerity by examining the constructions of scarci...
There is growing policy maker and public concern about current trends in food bank use in Scotland. ...
This chapter explores the apparently paradoxical phenomenon of foodie austerity in the British media...
This article investigates how culinary taste contributes to the formation of middle class identity i...
This article investigates how culinary taste contributes to the formation of middle class identity i...
Existing discussions of food democracy focus on people’s freedom to choose healthy, sustainable, or ...
This editorial introduces a Special Issue on food practices and social inequality by outlining a dic...
Absorbing Fare examines the imaginative functions of food and ingestion within the discourses of dif...