Nutritionism: The Science and Politics of Dietary Advice

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Product Details
Price
$32.95  $30.64
Publisher
Columbia University Press
Publish Date
Pages
368
Dimensions
6.22 X 9.34 X 1.07 inches | 1.39 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9780231156561

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About the Author
Gyorgy Scrinis is a lecturer in food politics in the School of Land and Environment at the University of Melbourne, Australia. His research addresses the politics, sociology, and philosophy of food and of science and technology.
Reviews
Nutritionism is an important contribution to the discourse of the alternative food movement, providing a unique, scholarly rationale for the food-quality paradigm. Gyorgy Scrinis provides a new language for talking about how our ideas about what makes a good diet have come to be.--Charlotte Biltekoff, University of California, Davis
Scrinis details the ideology of 'nutritionism, ' in which the great majority of dietary advice is reduced to statements about a few nutrients. The resulting cascade is nutrient-based dietary guidelines, nutrition labeling, food engineering, and food marketing. I agree with Scrinis that a broader focus on foods would lead to quite a different scientific and political cascade, including a more healthful diet for many people and a different relationship between the public and the food industry.--David Jacobs, Mayo Professor of Public Health, School of Public Health, University of Minnesota
This book artfully brings together two fields. One is the huge body of scholarly and popular texts that provide nutritional advice, or tell us what to eat. Scrinis has combed through this literature in exhaustive detail to provide a magnificent synthesis. The other field is what I would call critical nutrition studies, referring to a growing literature that interrogates and historicizes nutritional advice. Scrinis critiques this on its own terms and then suggests other approaches to evaluating food.--Julie Guthman, author of Weighing In: Obesity, Food Justice, and the Limits of Capitalism
It is an arithmetic of which too many of us are capable--casting our eyes over our plates and calculating under our breath the balance of carbohydrate, protein, calorie, and other nutritional values. The origins of this very modern, very capitalist grace are laid bare in Gyorgy Scrinis's important, iconoclastic, and long-awaited study. If you care about the nutritional content of your food, you should care about why you care. Nutritionism, in large doses, has the answers.--Raj Patel, author of Stuffed and Starved: The Hidden Battle for the World System
Clear and readable overview of food, diet, and what we do and don't know about it.--Colorado Springs Independent
An impressive work of detailed scholarship and highly recommended for academic library Health & Medicine reference collections.--Library Bookwatch