A Heavy Burden of Identity: India, Food, Globalization, and Women
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Published:2007
Jenny Mish, 2007. "A Heavy Burden of Identity: India, Food, Globalization, and Women", Consumer Culture Theory, Russell W. Belk, John F. Sherry
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India's dynamic turn toward globalization brings new eating practices driven by desires for status and convenience. Traditional expectations of women as keepers of domestic culture persist as fears of a possible loss of Indianness are projected onto women. In the reflexive identity processes of urban middle-class Hindu women, new normative beauty ideals are often impossible to attain, resulting in Western-style food-related health problems. Awareness of these risks may be deflected by matrimonial, body image, and time pressures, as depicted in a preliminary model of food globalization and women's identities.
