9780429344824_10.4324_9780429344824-23.pdf

The point of this chapter is to disrupt the ‘truth’ that food marketing contributes to childhood obesity by critically examining how certainty about this relationship is (re)produced through expert knowledge and the unquestioning acceptance of the ‘junk food marketing = childhood obesity’ discourse....

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Έκδοση: Taylor & Francis 2023
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spelling oapen-20.500.12657-628852024-03-28T08:18:48Z Chapter 19 Junk food marketing, childhood obesity, and the production of (un)certainty Powell, Darren thema EDItEUR::J Society and Social Sciences::JB Society and culture: general::JBF Social and ethical issues::JBFN Health, illness and addiction: social aspects The point of this chapter is to disrupt the ‘truth’ that food marketing contributes to childhood obesity by critically examining how certainty about this relationship is (re)produced through expert knowledge and the unquestioning acceptance of the ‘junk food marketing = childhood obesity’ discourse. My aim here is to illuminate how dominant obesity discourses work to produce ‘regimes of truth’ about the relationship between food marketing and childhood obesity; how expertise, power, knowledge, and discourses congeal and cohere to (re)produce the taken-for-granted assumption that junk food marketing = childhood obesity. In a similar vein to Gard and Wright’s critique of ‘certain’ obesity discourses in physical education, my central concern is how scholars – particularly in the field of public health – contribute to the dismantlement of uncertainty (with respect to knowledge about the relationship between ‘junk’ food advertising and fatness) and the concomitant construction of certainty “where none seems justified”. 2023-05-02T09:50:57Z 2023-05-02T09:50:57Z 2022 chapter 9781032162195 9780429344824 https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/62885 eng application/pdf Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International 9780429344824_10.4324_9780429344824-23.pdf Taylor & Francis Routledge Handbook of Critical Obesity Studies Routledge 10.4324/9780429344824-23 10.4324/9780429344824-23 7b3c7b10-5b1e-40b3-860e-c6dd5197f0bb 2a9756e3-b3ef-4298-801f-7431065932f9 73c44324-2dea-4efb-9052-e3608c2b12ed 9781032162195 9780429344824 Routledge 12 University of Auckland University of Auckland, New Zealand open access
institution OAPEN
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language English
description The point of this chapter is to disrupt the ‘truth’ that food marketing contributes to childhood obesity by critically examining how certainty about this relationship is (re)produced through expert knowledge and the unquestioning acceptance of the ‘junk food marketing = childhood obesity’ discourse. My aim here is to illuminate how dominant obesity discourses work to produce ‘regimes of truth’ about the relationship between food marketing and childhood obesity; how expertise, power, knowledge, and discourses congeal and cohere to (re)produce the taken-for-granted assumption that junk food marketing = childhood obesity. In a similar vein to Gard and Wright’s critique of ‘certain’ obesity discourses in physical education, my central concern is how scholars – particularly in the field of public health – contribute to the dismantlement of uncertainty (with respect to knowledge about the relationship between ‘junk’ food advertising and fatness) and the concomitant construction of certainty “where none seems justified”.
title 9780429344824_10.4324_9780429344824-23.pdf
spellingShingle 9780429344824_10.4324_9780429344824-23.pdf
title_short 9780429344824_10.4324_9780429344824-23.pdf
title_full 9780429344824_10.4324_9780429344824-23.pdf
title_fullStr 9780429344824_10.4324_9780429344824-23.pdf
title_full_unstemmed 9780429344824_10.4324_9780429344824-23.pdf
title_sort 9780429344824_10.4324_9780429344824-23.pdf
publisher Taylor & Francis
publishDate 2023
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