Moral Foods
豆瓣
The Construction of Nutrition and Health in Modern Asia
Angela Ki Che Leung / Melissa L. Caldwell
简介
Moral Foods: The Construction of Nutrition and Health in Modern Asia investigates how foods came to be established as moral entities, how moral food regimes reveal emerging systems of knowledge and enforcement, and how these developments have contributed to new Asian nutritional knowledge regimes. The collection’s focus on cross-cultural and transhistorical comparisons across Asia brings into view a broad spectrum of modern Asia that extends from East Asia, Southeast Asia, to South Asia, as well as into global communities of Western knowledge, practice, and power outside Asia.
The first section, “Good Foods,” focuses on how food norms and rules have been established in modern Asia. Ideas about good foods and good bodies shift at different moments, in some cases privileging local foods and knowledge systems, and in other cases privileging foreign foods and knowledge systems. The second section, “Bad Foods,” focuses on what makes foods bad and even dangerous. Bad foods are not simply unpleasant or undesirable for aesthetic or sensory reasons, but they can hinder the stability and development of persons and societies. Bad foods are symbolically polluting, as in the case of foreign foods that threaten not only traditional foods, but also the stability and strength of the nation and its people. The third section, “Moral Foods,” focuses on how themes of good versus bad are embedded in projects to make modern persons, subjects, and states, with specific attention to the ambiguities and malleability of foods and health. The malleability of moral foods provides unique opportunities for understanding Asian societies’ dynamic position within larger global flows, connections, and disconnections.
Collectively, the chapters raise intriguing questions about how foods and the bodies that consume them have been valued politically, economically, culturally, and morally, and about how those values originated and evolved. Consumers in modern Asia are not simply eating to satisfy personal desires or physiological needs, but they are also conscripted into national and global statemaking projects through acts of ingestion. Eating, then, has become about fortifying both the person and the nation.
contents
Acknowledgments
ix
Introduction: Food and Health: Fortification and
Modern Asian State Making 1
Melissa L. Caldwell and Angela Ki Che Leung
PART I GOOD FOODS
1 Health, Wealth, and Solidarity: Rice as Self in
Japan and Malaysia 23
Francesca Bray
2 Confronting the Cow: Soybean Milk and
the Fashioning of a Chinese Dairy
Alternative 47
Jia-Chen Fu
3 Moral Responsibility for Nutritional Milk:
Motherhood and Breastfeeding in
Modern Japan 66
Izumi Nakayama
4 Eating Well for Survival: Chinese Nutrition Experiments
during World War II 89
Michael Shiyung Liu
PART II BAD FOODS
5 The Good, the Bad, and the Toxic: Moral Foods in
British India 111
David Arnold
6 The Good, the Bad, and the Foreign: Trajectories of
Three Grains in Modern South Korea 130
Tae-Ho Kim
7 Snacking, Health, Modernity: Moralizing Confections
in Japan, 1890–1930 150
Tatsuya Mitsuda
8 Bad Meat: Food and the Medicine of Modern Hygiene
in Colonial Hong Kong 173
Robert Peckham
PART III MORAL FOODS
9 Becoming Healthy: Changing Perception of Tea’s
Effects on the Body 201
Lawrence Zhang
10 To Build or to Transform Vegetarian China:
Two Republican Projects 221
Angela Ki Che Leung
11 From Civilizing Foods for Nourishing Life to a Global
Traditional Chinese Medicine Dietetics: Changing
Perceptions of Foods in Chinese Medicine 241
Volker Scheid
12 Good Food, Bad Bodies: Lactose Intolerance and
the Rise of Milk Culture in China 262
Hilary A. Smith
Glossary 285
Bibliography 293
Contributors 331
Index 335