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Between Product and Cuisine: The Moral Economies of Food among Young Chinese People in Japan
[journal article]
Abstract Trade and consumption of food in the Sino-Japanese context connects the two countries' tense political relationship to the everyday lives of its citizens. Previous research has shown how food-related incidents have imbued Sino-Japanese relations with political and moral discourse that connects secur... view more
Trade and consumption of food in the Sino-Japanese context connects the two countries' tense political relationship to the everyday lives of its citizens. Previous research has shown how food-related incidents have imbued Sino-Japanese relations with political and moral discourse that connects security concerns to everyday fears. This article explores how young Chinese people in Japan navigate multiple moral economies related to food. Through analysis of "products" (chanpin/shipin) and "cuisine" (cai/liaoli), this article shows the differing meanings of Chinese moral economies of food from the perspective of young Chinese people living in Japan. In the Sino-Japanese context, products embody more metonymic and nationalised values associated with modernity, whereas the metaphoric possibilities of cuisine afford young Chinese people to negotiate dominant moral economies of food in Japan. Using this example, I argue that greater semiotic attention needs to be paid to the multiple meanings of food and its moral economies.... view less
Classification
Sociology of Economics
Ethnology, Cultural Anthropology, Ethnosociology
Free Keywords
China; Japan; mobility; food; product; cuisine
Document language
English
Publication Year
2019
Page/Pages
p. 381-399
Journal
Journal of Current Chinese Affairs, 48 (2019) 3
ISSN
1868-4874
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed