Bad avocados, culinary standards, and knowable knowledge: Culturally appropriate rejections of meat reduction

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Bad avocados, culinary standards, and knowable knowledge: Culturally appropriate rejections of meat reduction. / Skelly, Thomas A. M.; Ditlevsen, Kia.

I: Journal of Consumer Culture, 02.04.2024.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Skelly, TAM & Ditlevsen, K 2024, 'Bad avocados, culinary standards, and knowable knowledge: Culturally appropriate rejections of meat reduction', Journal of Consumer Culture. https://doi.org/10.1177/14695405241243199

APA

Skelly, T. A. M., & Ditlevsen, K. (2024). Bad avocados, culinary standards, and knowable knowledge: Culturally appropriate rejections of meat reduction. Journal of Consumer Culture. https://doi.org/10.1177/14695405241243199

Vancouver

Skelly TAM, Ditlevsen K. Bad avocados, culinary standards, and knowable knowledge: Culturally appropriate rejections of meat reduction. Journal of Consumer Culture. 2024 apr. 2. https://doi.org/10.1177/14695405241243199

Author

Skelly, Thomas A. M. ; Ditlevsen, Kia. / Bad avocados, culinary standards, and knowable knowledge: Culturally appropriate rejections of meat reduction. I: Journal of Consumer Culture. 2024.

Bibtex

@article{18f4adb2be3b4161ab118974ebb2edb4,
title = "Bad avocados, culinary standards, and knowable knowledge: Culturally appropriate rejections of meat reduction",
abstract = "Cultural conventions are central to tackling unsustainable consumption. In the Global North food conventions are increasingly contested due to the political importance of climate change and the share of global greenhouse gas emissions tied to animal food production and consumption. Significant reductions in meat consumption are touted as pathways to adaptation, but most consumers remain committed to consuming meat-based meals and diets with meat. To explore how consumers handle these issues in today{\textquoteright}s cultural context, this article examines culturally appropriate ways of rejecting meat reduction. The theoretical framework is based on interactionism and accounts. The empirical material is from focus group discussions with Danish consumers. We find that in discussions about using plant-based meat, norms of proper culinary conduct are held to be more pressing guides for normative assessment than climate impacts. We also show that the status and function of climate impact “knowledge” is complex and ambiguous. A shared social knowledge of the climate impacts of meat consumption appears to exist alongside “questionable knowledge” and “lack of knowledge”, both of which are referred to excuse, justify, and charge others in reasoning supporting continued meat consumption. Knowledge of climate impacts is accepted when it fits cultural conventions but appears less knowable if it poses challenges to contemporary consumer culture. The article contributes insights into the ways in which cultural conventions and complex knowledge negotiations help to preserve unsustainable consumption.",
author = "Skelly, {Thomas A. M.} and Kia Ditlevsen",
year = "2024",
month = apr,
day = "2",
doi = "10.1177/14695405241243199",
language = "English",
journal = "Journal of Consumer Culture",
issn = "1469-5405",
publisher = "SAGE Publications",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Bad avocados, culinary standards, and knowable knowledge: Culturally appropriate rejections of meat reduction

AU - Skelly, Thomas A. M.

AU - Ditlevsen, Kia

PY - 2024/4/2

Y1 - 2024/4/2

N2 - Cultural conventions are central to tackling unsustainable consumption. In the Global North food conventions are increasingly contested due to the political importance of climate change and the share of global greenhouse gas emissions tied to animal food production and consumption. Significant reductions in meat consumption are touted as pathways to adaptation, but most consumers remain committed to consuming meat-based meals and diets with meat. To explore how consumers handle these issues in today’s cultural context, this article examines culturally appropriate ways of rejecting meat reduction. The theoretical framework is based on interactionism and accounts. The empirical material is from focus group discussions with Danish consumers. We find that in discussions about using plant-based meat, norms of proper culinary conduct are held to be more pressing guides for normative assessment than climate impacts. We also show that the status and function of climate impact “knowledge” is complex and ambiguous. A shared social knowledge of the climate impacts of meat consumption appears to exist alongside “questionable knowledge” and “lack of knowledge”, both of which are referred to excuse, justify, and charge others in reasoning supporting continued meat consumption. Knowledge of climate impacts is accepted when it fits cultural conventions but appears less knowable if it poses challenges to contemporary consumer culture. The article contributes insights into the ways in which cultural conventions and complex knowledge negotiations help to preserve unsustainable consumption.

AB - Cultural conventions are central to tackling unsustainable consumption. In the Global North food conventions are increasingly contested due to the political importance of climate change and the share of global greenhouse gas emissions tied to animal food production and consumption. Significant reductions in meat consumption are touted as pathways to adaptation, but most consumers remain committed to consuming meat-based meals and diets with meat. To explore how consumers handle these issues in today’s cultural context, this article examines culturally appropriate ways of rejecting meat reduction. The theoretical framework is based on interactionism and accounts. The empirical material is from focus group discussions with Danish consumers. We find that in discussions about using plant-based meat, norms of proper culinary conduct are held to be more pressing guides for normative assessment than climate impacts. We also show that the status and function of climate impact “knowledge” is complex and ambiguous. A shared social knowledge of the climate impacts of meat consumption appears to exist alongside “questionable knowledge” and “lack of knowledge”, both of which are referred to excuse, justify, and charge others in reasoning supporting continued meat consumption. Knowledge of climate impacts is accepted when it fits cultural conventions but appears less knowable if it poses challenges to contemporary consumer culture. The article contributes insights into the ways in which cultural conventions and complex knowledge negotiations help to preserve unsustainable consumption.

U2 - 10.1177/14695405241243199

DO - 10.1177/14695405241243199

M3 - Journal article

JO - Journal of Consumer Culture

JF - Journal of Consumer Culture

SN - 1469-5405

ER -

ID: 385647897