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Abstract

Certain geographical areas and neighbourhood types have come to symbolise patterns of ignorance, lack of opportunity and ‘poor lifestyle choice’ in public discussions of family food practices. The media, reporting recently on the activities of one of the UK’s ‘celebrity’ chefs announced: ‘Jamie Oliver to teach the poor how to cook ‘the basics’ in town [Rotherham] where mums opposed his school dinners campaign’ (The Daily Mail 28 March 2008). Concern about diet and about contemporary eating practices is therefore widespread. An increasing public focus on diet and health is not surprising: in England the number of obese children has tripled in 20 years. Ten per cent of six year olds are estimated to be obese, rising to 17% of 15 year olds (Zaninotto et al. 2006). While current concern about childhood obesity is usually expressed in terms of what children eat, implicit in contemporary discourses about health is also a critique of how they eat. While the ‘what’ is subject to scientific debate among for example, nutritionists and members of the medical profession, discussion of the ‘how’ has often been dominated by prejudice, myth and unquestioned assumptions which are grounded in notions of appropriate — and inappropriate — forms of parenting and family life.

If you try to give too much information it doesn’t work…and, you know, you have to bear in mind there are some communities that have very, very limited diets already. I mean, you know, they wouldn’t know what an aubergine looked like in some communities. Particularly in [this town] (Karen/Manager/Primary Care Trust).

The people that come to us do definitely benefit and they do need it, eh, I would say they’re very typical of people who do need interventions (Sadie/Practitioner/Community Food Worker).

I’m not a silly person I know what is healthy, I already know that…it isn’t about that, and it was more…somewhere to go in the evening for, for me…I’ve not done that for a long time (Ingrid/lone mother/four children).

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© 2009 Trish Green, Jenny Owen, Penny Curtis, Graham Smith, Paul Ward and Pamela Fisher

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Green, T., Owen, J., Curtis, P., Smith, G., Ward, P., Fisher, P. (2009). Making Healthy Families?. In: Jackson, P. (eds) Changing Families, Changing Food. Palgrave Macmillan Studies in Family and Intimate Life. Palgrave Macmillan, London. https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230244795_12

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