Affiliation:
1. Centre Max Weber UMR 5283 Lyon France
2. College of Nursing and Health Sciences Flinders University Adelaide South Australia Australia
Abstract
AbstractObjectiveThis study examined how family members managed emotions ‐ or produced emotion work ‐ during family mealtimes and how this affected eating together in contexts where positive feeling rules, such as expectations of feeling happy together at the table, shaped commensality.BackgroundThe happy family meal ideology is widespread, but few studies have specifically investigated the way emotions are managed at the table.MethodsBased on 90 h of observations and 47 interviews with parents and children in 14 households across France and Australia, this ethnographic study examined emotions during family mealtimes. The data was analyzed using grounded theory.ResultsPositive feeling rules affected family mealtimes and led the mothers and fathers to produce significant, but different types of mealtime emotion work. The mothers were seen as caring, loving, and patient, whereas the fathers were seen as fun, but also impatient and authoritative. The lower the social class position of the family, the more parents distanced themselves from normative feeling rules—or from the happy family meal ideology—which meant emotions were not moderated as much.ConclusionThe type and intensity of emotion work repositioned parents in unequal roles of care and power relationships in relation to each other.ImplicationsThe amount and type of mealtime emotion work are key to understanding the barriers and burdens that families face when wanting to eat together.
Funder
Mars
Association Nationale de la Recherche et de la Technologie
Flinders University
Reference93 articles.
1. 11. « Travail émotionnel, dissonance émotionnelle et contrefaçon de l'intimité ». Vingt-cinq ans après la publication de Managed Heart d'Arlie R. Hochschild
2. Australian Bureau of Statistics. (2018 November 6). Canberra Australia ABS.Main Features—Socio‐Economic Advantage and Disadvantage. Abs.Gov.Au; c=AU; o=Commonwealth of Australia; ou=Australian Bureau of Statistics.https://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/Lookup/by%20Subject/2071.0~2016~Main%20Features~Socio‐Economic%20Advantage%20and%20Disadvantage~123
3. ‘I'm having jelly because you've been bad!’: A grounded theory study of mealtimes with siblings in Australian families
4. `It's Just Easier for Me to Do It': Rationalizing the Family Division of Foodwork