Wiggins Sally
Department of Behavioral Sciences and Learning, Linköping University, Linköping, Sweden.
Front Psychol. 2019 Jul 2;10:1404. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01404. eCollection 2019.
The enjoyment of food and the sharing of mealtimes is a normative cultural and social practice. Empirical research on eating enjoyment has, however, been a rather neglected area across the social sciences, often marginalized in favor of health or focusing on individual preferences rather than shared enjoyment. Even with regards to children, their enjoyment of food is typically rated retrospectively via parental reports of mealtime behavior. What is missing is an understanding of how enjoyment becomes a normative, cultural practice during mealtimes. This paper examines this issue in the context of parents feeding their 5-8-month-old infants in the family home, since it is within this context that we can see the early emergence of such practices in often highly routinized situations. The enactment of eating as enjoyable, and of the food as appreciated or "liked" in some way, is a culturally normative practice that becomes recognizable through particular non-lexical ("mmm," "ooh") or lexical ("this is nice, isn't it?") utterances. The data comprise 66 infant mealtimes video-recorded over almost 19 h, from five families living in Scotland. The analysis uses discursive psychology and focuses on the sequential position of different types of parental gustatory as produced during the infant meals. A classification of four types of were identified in the corpus-announcement, receipting, modeling, and encouragement -each associated with features of sequential and multimodal organization within the mealtime. In the majority of instances, s were uttered alone with no other assessment terms, and parents typically produced these as an orientation to the enjoyment of their infants', rather than their own, eating practices. The receipting , for instance, occurred at the precise moment when the infant's mouth closed around the food. It is argued that eating enjoyment can be considered as much an interactional practice as an individual sensation, and that non-lexical vocalizations around food are an essential part of sensory practices. The paper thus aims to bridge the gap between cultural and psychological studies of eating enjoyment and contribute to developmental studies of infant feeding in everyday interaction.
对食物的享受以及用餐时间的共享是一种规范的文化和社会实践。然而,在社会科学领域,关于饮食享受的实证研究一直是一个相当被忽视的领域,常常被边缘化,优先关注健康问题,或者侧重于个人偏好而非共享的享受。即使是关于儿童,他们对食物的享受通常也是通过父母对用餐行为的回顾性报告来评定。所缺失的是对享受如何在用餐时间成为一种规范的文化实践的理解。本文在家庭环境中父母喂养5至8个月大婴儿的背景下审视这一问题,因为正是在这种背景下,我们可以看到这些实践在通常高度程式化的情境中早期出现的情况。将进食表现为令人享受的,以及将食物以某种方式视为被欣赏或“喜欢”的,是一种文化规范的实践,通过特定的非词汇性(“嗯”“哦”)或词汇性(“这很好吃,不是吗?”)话语变得可识别。数据包括来自苏格兰五个家庭的近19小时内录制的66次婴儿用餐视频。分析采用话语心理学,关注婴儿用餐期间父母不同类型味觉表述的顺序位置。在语料库中确定了四种类型的表述——宣告、回应、示范和鼓励——每种都与用餐时间内的顺序和多模态组织特征相关联。在大多数情况下,表述是单独说出的,没有其他评价性词语,而且父母通常将这些表述作为对婴儿进食行为享受的一种导向,而非他们自己的进食行为。例如,回应性表述恰好在婴儿嘴巴闭合咬住食物的那一刻出现。有人认为,饮食享受既可以被视为一种互动实践,也可以被视为一种个体感觉,并且围绕食物的非词汇性发声是感官实践的重要组成部分。因此,本文旨在弥合饮食享受的文化研究和心理学研究之间的差距,并为日常互动中婴儿喂养的发展研究做出贡献。