University of Essex.
Br J Sociol. 2018 Dec;69(4):1271-1292. doi: 10.1111/1468-4446.12333. Epub 2017 Nov 22.
The aim of this paper is to develop and apply a framework to explore how moralities of consumption are constituted in and through markets. Using the case of ready-made foods, this paper argues moral economies are comprised through interactions between micro-, meso- and macro-level processes in the form of instituted systems of provision, state regulation, collective food customs promoted though media, NGOs and lifestyle practitioners, and the everyday reflections of consumers. Building on a theoretical framework developed to understand the moral economy of work and employment (Bolton and Laaser 2013), this paper explores how markets for ready-made food are incessantly negotiated in the context of moral ideas about cooking, femininity and individual responsibility. It focuses on 'new' market innovations of fresh ready-to-cook meal solutions and explores how these products are both a response to moralizing discourses about cooking 'properly', as well as an intervention into the market that offers opportunities for new moral identities to be performed. Using data gathered from interviews with food manufacturers and consumers, I advocate for a multi-layered perspective that captures the dynamic interplay between consumers, markets and moralities of consumption.
本文旨在构建并应用一个框架,以探究消费道德是如何在市场中形成并通过市场得以体现的。本文以方便食品为例,认为道德经济是通过微观、中观和宏观层面的互动构成的,这些互动表现为供应的既定体系、国家调控、通过媒体、非政府组织和生活方式从业者倡导的集体饮食习俗,以及消费者的日常思考。本文借鉴了一个旨在理解工作和就业道德经济的理论框架(Bolton and Laaser 2013),探讨了方便食品市场是如何在关于烹饪、女性气质和个人责任的道德观念背景下不断协商的。本文聚焦于新鲜即煮餐食解决方案等“新”市场创新,并探讨这些产品既是对正确烹饪的道德化论述的回应,也是对市场的一种干预,为新的道德认同提供了发挥的机会。本文通过对食品制造商和消费者的访谈数据进行研究,倡导采取一种多层次的视角,以捕捉消费者、市场和消费道德之间的动态相互作用。