Gastronomy: An Overlooked Arena for the Cultivation of Sustainable Meaning?

Author:

Östergren Daniel1ORCID,Walter Ute1,Gustavsson Bernt2,Jonsson Inger M.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Hospitality, Culinary Arts and Meal Science, Örebro University, SE-71202 Grythyttan, Sweden

2. Department of Education and Lifelong Learning, Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), NO-7491 Trondheim, Norway

Abstract

This article explores sustainable development from a gastronomic perspective. Humanistic perspectives on food offered by gastronomy are explored as an asset in cultivating self-awareness capacities needed for sustainable transformations of society. The purpose is to explore how gastronomes can cultivate understandings and explanations of sustainability to be conveyed to individuals via meals. In semi-annually recurring dialogic interviews, four university-educated gastronomes cultivated their understandings and explanations of sustainability, and modeled how these could be communicated to other individuals. The dialogues gradually brought the ideas of the researcher and the participants toward a common explanation of the potential ways gastronomic competency could advance sustainable development. The results highlight two ways of understanding gastronomic sustainability: functionally as practical communication, and formally as a cultural issue. Based on H.G. Gadamer’s idea of bildung as hermeneutic interpretation, we argue that self-awareness is a process which is rooted in how knowledge is interpreted, understood, and explained by the individual. Practical participation in culturally influenced meals makes gastronomy a bridge between individual and societal issues, whereby gastronomic competencies can cultivate sustainable commitment, judgment, and community. In this way, gastronomic sustainability represents an approach to sustainable development that, significantly, also involves the cultivation of sustainable meaning.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Environmental Science

Reference77 articles.

1. UN (2023, April 04). What Is Sustainable Gastronomy?. Available online: https://www.un.org/en/observances/sustainable-gastronomy-day.

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3. Legrand, T., Jervoise, A., Wamsler, C., Dufour, C., Bristow, J., Bockler, J., Cooper, K., Corção, T., Negowetti, N., and Oliver, T. (2023, April 04). Cultivating Inner Capacities for Regenerative Food Systems: Rationale for Action. Report. United Nations Development Programme. Available online: https://www.contemplative-sustainable-futures.com/_files/ugd/4cc31e_b5718ed24fa54a868896518497b02a6e.pdf.

4. Chefs as Change-Makers from the Kitchen: Indigenous Knowledge and Traditional Food as Sustainability Innovations;Pereira;Glob. Sustain.,2019

5. Westling, M. (2022). Sensory Qualities and Culinary Utility of Produce: A Path Towards Sustainable Gastronomy. [Ph.D. Thesis, Örebro University].

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