Contribution in an anthology

Moralities of Sharing and Caring


Authors listNiehof, A; Wahlen, S

Appeared inGendered Food Practices from Seed to Waste

Editor listBock, B; Duncan, J

Publication year2017

Pages141-155

ISBN978-90-8704-626-2

URLhttps://www.researchgate.net/publication/312584613

Title of seriesYearbook of women's history : Jaarboek voor Vrouwengeschiedenis

Number in series36


Abstract

This paper propounds the concept of the moral household economy in order to understand and explain gender performances in food practices of sharing and caring in the socio-cultural domain of unpaid food work. Households are the immediate context for meeting people’s food and nutrition needs and for everyday practices of caring and sharing, which are based on moral responsibilities. By applying the concept of moral economy to households, the boundary that separates abstract morality from the morality acknowledged and implied by social practices is challenged. Since the household is a gendered sphere, moral household economies are gendered. We integrate these notions into one theoretical construct, drawing on illustrative cases to exemplify linkages and processes. The paper offers a novel theoretical framework for understanding the relationship between gender and food by looking at food practices of sharing and caring in the context of the household as a space of gendered morality.




Authors/Editors




Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleNiehof, A. and Wahlen, S. (2017) Moralities of Sharing and Caring, in Bock, B. and Duncan, J. (eds.) Gendered Food Practices from Seed to Waste. Amsterdam , Hilversum: Verloren, pp. 141-155. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/312584613

APA Citation styleNiehof, A., & Wahlen, S. (2017). Moralities of Sharing and Caring. In Bock, B., & Duncan, J. (Eds.), Gendered Food Practices from Seed to Waste (pp. 141-155). Verloren. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/312584613


Last updated on 2025-21-05 at 15:58