Recasting Food

This study is an ethnographic enquiry into the pre-school Supplementary Nutrition Programme (SNP), in India’s western Gujarat state. The broad objective was aimed at understanding the institutional barriers and sociological process that had led to the exclusion of families and children under the age...

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Main Authors: Nakkeeran N, Dr, Sushrut Jadhav, Aruna Bhattacharya, Sunil Gamit, Chetan Mehta, Pratiksha Purohit, Ruchi Patel, Minal Doshi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Brandeis University Library 2020-02-01
Series:Caste
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.library.brandeis.edu/index.php/caste/article/view/6
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author Nakkeeran N, Dr
Sushrut Jadhav
Aruna Bhattacharya
Sunil Gamit
Chetan Mehta
Pratiksha Purohit
Ruchi Patel
Minal Doshi
author_facet Nakkeeran N, Dr
Sushrut Jadhav
Aruna Bhattacharya
Sunil Gamit
Chetan Mehta
Pratiksha Purohit
Ruchi Patel
Minal Doshi
author_sort Nakkeeran N, Dr
collection DOAJ
description This study is an ethnographic enquiry into the pre-school Supplementary Nutrition Programme (SNP), in India’s western Gujarat state. The broad objective was aimed at understanding the institutional barriers and sociological process that had led to the exclusion of families and children under the age of six from the SNP. This study was undertaken because despite enthusiastic State investment in human resources and food funding, the uptake of SNP was poor. The study method involved multi-sited ethnographies conducted in four rural villages of Gujarat. The research concluded that caste and religious identities shaped dominance and control, restriction of social interactions, and food commensality. The authors situate these compelling findings within the broader discourse of food as a process of ‘othering,’ and stigmatised identities as they relate to consumption of ‘polluting’ food, the symbolic role of food when coupled with caste, and association of religion with food. Observations of SNP delivery sites suggest that spatial and moral dimension of societal caste conflicts directly influence local ‘biologies’ by reproducing and amplifying such tensions in the Anganwadi health centres. Crucial symbolic and cultural markers of food, nutrition, distribution, and consumption are rendered invisible to official health providers resulting in failure of the SNP programme. Current research on global health advocating ‘scaling up of models’ is an ethical violation if it glosses local ecologies that shape poor uptake of SNP by the affected communities.
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spelling doaj.art-385f152c6f214c989f0ef9bbab400a402022-12-21T19:06:29ZengBrandeis University LibraryCaste2639-49282020-02-011111610.26812/caste.v1i1.66Recasting FoodNakkeeran N, Dr0Sushrut Jadhav1Aruna BhattacharyaSunil GamitChetan MehtaPratiksha PurohitRuchi PatelMinal DoshiIndian Institute of Public Health, Ahmedabad, GujaratUniversity College London, UK & SOAS, UKThis study is an ethnographic enquiry into the pre-school Supplementary Nutrition Programme (SNP), in India’s western Gujarat state. The broad objective was aimed at understanding the institutional barriers and sociological process that had led to the exclusion of families and children under the age of six from the SNP. This study was undertaken because despite enthusiastic State investment in human resources and food funding, the uptake of SNP was poor. The study method involved multi-sited ethnographies conducted in four rural villages of Gujarat. The research concluded that caste and religious identities shaped dominance and control, restriction of social interactions, and food commensality. The authors situate these compelling findings within the broader discourse of food as a process of ‘othering,’ and stigmatised identities as they relate to consumption of ‘polluting’ food, the symbolic role of food when coupled with caste, and association of religion with food. Observations of SNP delivery sites suggest that spatial and moral dimension of societal caste conflicts directly influence local ‘biologies’ by reproducing and amplifying such tensions in the Anganwadi health centres. Crucial symbolic and cultural markers of food, nutrition, distribution, and consumption are rendered invisible to official health providers resulting in failure of the SNP programme. Current research on global health advocating ‘scaling up of models’ is an ethical violation if it glosses local ecologies that shape poor uptake of SNP by the affected communities.https://journals.library.brandeis.edu/index.php/caste/article/view/6foodcasteinequality
spellingShingle Nakkeeran N, Dr
Sushrut Jadhav
Aruna Bhattacharya
Sunil Gamit
Chetan Mehta
Pratiksha Purohit
Ruchi Patel
Minal Doshi
Recasting Food
Caste
food
caste
inequality
title Recasting Food
title_full Recasting Food
title_fullStr Recasting Food
title_full_unstemmed Recasting Food
title_short Recasting Food
title_sort recasting food
topic food
caste
inequality
url https://journals.library.brandeis.edu/index.php/caste/article/view/6
work_keys_str_mv AT nakkeeranndr recastingfood
AT sushrutjadhav recastingfood
AT arunabhattacharya recastingfood
AT sunilgamit recastingfood
AT chetanmehta recastingfood
AT pratikshapurohit recastingfood
AT ruchipatel recastingfood
AT minaldoshi recastingfood