From 'cooking wife' to 'cooking mother': Exploring generational shifts in perceptions regarding domestic cooking practices.

Nutr Diet

Postgraduate Program in Nutrition, Nutrition in Foodservice Research Centre, Federal University of Santa Catarina, João David Ferreira Lima Campus, Florianópolis, SC, Brazil.

Published: October 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines how women from different generations view their cooking experiences through a life course perspective.
  • Interviews with 22 Brazilian women reveal three main themes: generational differences in food context, shifting perceptions of cooking responsibilities linked to gender, and evolving feelings about cooking as an obligation versus a source of liberation.
  • The findings suggest that cooking promotion strategies should address gender dynamics, emphasizing pleasure and autonomy in the kitchen rather than just obligation.

Article Abstract

Aims: Utilising the life course perspective as the theoretical framework, we investigate how women from different generations perceive their cooking experiences and articulate their feelings regarding this activity.

Method: Following a review of the literature and four exploratory focus groups, an interview guide was developed and piloted. Interviews were conducted with 22 Brazilian women spanning three distinct generations. Participants were prompted to recall their life stories, spanning from childhood to the present day and focused on cooking-related situations. Interviews were transcripted and analysed using reflexive thematic analysis.

Results: There were three major themes developed. The first theme outlines variations in the food context across generations. The second theme encompasses perceptions of the responsibility for cooking as being linked to the female gender, indicating a generational shift from the role of the 'cooking wife' to that of the 'cooking mother'. The third theme explores thoughts and reflections on feelings of obligation, oppression, and liberation in cooking, tied to changes in the social and temporal context in which these women operate.

Conclusion: Strategies promoting cooking should consider the meanings attributed to it, contribute to the deconstruction of gender-specific family dynamics, and encourage the pursuit for pleasure, satisfaction and autonomy in this practice. This study contributes novel insights into cooking, including reflections on obligation or oppression versus liberation and the evolving social roles of women as primary cooks.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1747-0080.12910DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
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  • Interviews with 22 Brazilian women reveal three main themes: generational differences in food context, shifting perceptions of cooking responsibilities linked to gender, and evolving feelings about cooking as an obligation versus a source of liberation.
  • The findings suggest that cooking promotion strategies should address gender dynamics, emphasizing pleasure and autonomy in the kitchen rather than just obligation.
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