Showing posts with label Economics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Economics. Show all posts

Friday, April 20, 2018

9 Examples of Food Porn Discrimination

I test cookbooks on a fairly regular basis. I am offered cookbooks through Amazon Vine or I am sent them directly by publishers or authors. I probably average a cookbook once every two months. That's likely less than blogs which focus on cookbook testing but since I'm generally not given funds to buy ingredients or the ingredients to test out the recipes, I really can't afford to be trying out new recipes every single week. It is my economic reality that limits what I can review either for reviews on online bookstores, for publisher or author blogs, and of course for my primary blog, The Chocolate Cult. I often think "Can I afford to test these recipes?" or "What can I find on sale that might let me test these recipes?" Then I realized, my economic considerations are minor compared to many others. Today I want to share my thoughts about what I'm calling Food Porn Discrimination.

So many people love to look at food that the concept of "food porn" was developed. The idea of "foodpornography" seems to date by to the 1978 Frank Chin story "Railroad Standard Time" while "food pornography" was expanded upon by Rosalind Coward in her 1984 book Female Desire.  The basic idea is that food and sexual desire are connected. Of course seeing any type of desire as sexual has a much longer history in the Western World.

Today, we generally use the terms "food pornography" or "food porn" to refer to the great love people show online for shared photos of food (made or bought) and the focus on using such photos in media. Indeed, staging is very common at all levels of food photography from the average person taking a quick pic in a dark restaurant to the publishing of a cookbook spending thousands to have the images just so for the recipes or to accompany text.

I pay attention to the photography myself for The Chocolate Cult or my account on Instagram even though I won't spend money to get that image because I'm not selling products directly to anyone.


There isn't anything wrong with these beautiful images of food. Studies have shown that humans and animals in general may be drawn to lovely displays or bright colors of food. This is true for what we see right in front of us, in a still photograph, or a video we watch. 1, 2, and 3.

With internet access becoming more and more affordable, it becomes possible for the masses to share in the desire of food. However, with the loss of certain federal rules about the Internet we may be about to see a deep divide in terms of what people can access online. But that divide has been part of food porn for a while now with some online recipe sites or magazine requiring a subscription to get full access. There are a lot of free recipe sites out there and companies who sell food generally put out their sites for free, so you can get a lot of decent food porn for nothing or very little.

Print cookbooks are another matter. I have friends who collect cookbooks and one of our writers for this blog is a food historian. The type and number of images in cookbooks has skyrocketed. Recently I shared two books that I'm slowly working my way through to review with a friend of mine. She immediately said "This is food porn. This is, too." Books cost money and with so many cookbooks now trying to have a photo for very recipe they can be very pricy. You can try your public library if you are lucky enough to have access to one but of course you can't keep those (or you shouldn't). If you want to buy them, be willing to spend between $25 and $50 on average.

If you want vintage cookbooks these can cost thousands of dollars! Yikes!

Ebooks might seem like a good alternative if price is an issue. However many ebooks now cost the same as a paperback book and most cookbooks come out in a hardcover format. Sometimes I will accept an ecookbook but the quality is very hit and miss and so much of the layout is dependent upon the program the publisher used for the book. If it is for a Kindle, you have to use a Kindle for example. Even then some of the ecookbooks I've looked at have failed to line up the photo of a recipe properly and it just looks weird or even distasteful. Distasteful is the last thing you want in your food porn.

The photos in many cookbooks or professional online sites are lovely but can I get my attempts at those recipes to look like that? Usually not.

Sometimes this is a matter of recipe quality. The more cookbook testing I do, the easier it is for me to spot a poorly written recipe. But sometimes you don't realize that some detail is missing until it all goes bad. At other times the disappointment comes from your skills or your circumstances.

Beyond making food, your food porn desires may be a struggle because what you or a loved one sees and wants may not be available to you for a variety of reasons.

Food porn should make you feel good not horrible. The entire point of pornography of any type was to get return consumers afterall and who honestly wants to go back to have their self-esteem stomped without some pleasurable pay off?

Let's look at some of the reasons I believe that there is a bias in the world of food porn.

Examples of Food Porn Discrimination

1. You have not had the time or money to get the training required to make a recipe.

Schools are still teaching home economics even though the demise of this is bemoaned in a number of articles over the past few years. The number of courses taught and at what grade depends on the location of your schools. Formal classes to teach cooking dates back at at least the 19th century in the USA. None of these are free, not really, even if you personally aren't paying a fee, the money probably comes out of your taxes. So if you live in a school system that is poor or too urban, you may not have had a chance to learn. Not just that but honestly how many of you who did take home economics in junior high or high school have kept up the skills that you learned?

Let's say that you can't remember what you learned or you simply didn't learn that in school, getting the training as an adult isn't going to a taxes paid for proposition. Sure you might be able to find them at the community college or a program at your town does every year or every half year but again that will cost money. Beyond money it costs time. For many people barely making ends meet, they have neither time nor money and thus the skills needed to produce the food they admire.

2. You have not had the money to buy the gadgets and small appliances used in the recipes.

Some items are small and relatively inexpensive but many times when I'm looking through a cookbook or recipes online a tool will be mentioned that I don't have. Do I run out and find it? Hell, no! But many cookbooks include lists of where you can find all those gadgets and tools just in case you want to. Sometimes it isn't a matter of want but ability. Here on The Chocolate Cult I am sent such items from time to time so over the years I have been able to expand the recipes I can try based on having more tools at my disposal but I still run into the next problem.

3. You do not have the money to have a kitchen big enough to store all those gadgets and appliances used in recipes.

I subscribe to a housing porn email list because I love to dream about houses that my parents couldn't have afforded and which I am unlikely to be able to afford. The amount of kitchen you can get for your buck varies a great deal. You don't just need countertops to work on, I use my dining room table for a lot of things, but you do need places to store everything. That means drawers, shelves, cabinets, and even freezers and refrigerators. If your refrigerator-freezer unit can basically hold a few cubic feet of items, you aren't make large sheet cakes or storing food you found on sale in the freezer.

4. You do not have the time to spend on all the steps of the food prep for a recipe.

This gets us back to the problem in #1 -- Time. Recently I've been working on some cookbook reviews that really hit me with how much time is involved. Actually hands on work might be only an hour or two (and that could be a problem for some of you) but the amount of time I have to schedule the steps over can span anywhere from 12 to 24 hours. These are basically weekend recipes but a lot of folks work weekends or have other things they'd like to do rather than make a loaf of bread or a casserole. If you do, you are probably a stay-at-home spouse in an upper middle class home.  Less than 30% of American women (and far fewer men) fit into the stay-at-home part of this equation and a good chunk of those are not upper middle class but instead simply can't afford to pay for childcare until their kids are much older.

5. You may have children and/or pets that would make some of those food prep steps challenging if not impossible.

Now imagine that you personally do have that much time that you can plan out and see through the steps. What if you have kids or pets? Is there a safe place to store your sourdough starter without a risk of it getting knocked down? Will you have enough quiet to make that souffle? What about stirring constantly for 10 minutes or 20 minutes or longer? There's a reason why fancy dishes and time consuming courses were created in the kitchens of the wealthy. They had servants or slaves (or both) who had nothing else to do other than focus on that stovetop, the oven, or that countertop unless they wanted to be punished or not be paid.

6. You may not have time to go shopping for some of the ingredients either because of your work schedule or the distance to the types of shops where you can buy such products.

What if you are single, childless/petless, and you do have the resources like the money and time to put into recipes you might still face a struggle to find the ingredients Perhaps you live in a food desert where your store options are limited. This isn't just a problem for poor urban communities either. Rural communities are finding that grocery stores are moving out or being displaced by massive chains. Will you be able to find that particular type of olive a recipe calls for? What about a certain percentage of chocolate? How sure are you of your skills to substitute?

Yes, with grocery delivery services and places like Amazon or speciality shops online you can get get a lot more ingredients that you might be able to find in your hometown stores.

7. You may not have the money to spend on some of the ingredients even if you can find them.

You find the ingredients you need to recreate that lovely dish you saw on Instagram. Can you afford to order them? Will you be home when the mail carrier arrives? Not only do you pay for the food but you pay for the shipping. You might think that you shipping in free but you have to buy a certain amount or pay an annual membership fee. Those requirements do limit who can use these services.

8. You don't have the money to waste on food should the recipe not be fully vetted before it appears online or in a cookbook.

I grew up in a working class family. While some of you may have heard of the "eat what's on your plate because there are children starving in X" I heard "if you put it on your plate you must eat it." Why? If I didn't want it, my mother would save it for another meal either another dinner or a lunch or even breakfast, possibly even a lunchbox. But once it was on my plate, once I'd touched it, was it safe to save? They were poor but not so poor that she was willing to take that risk. However if she tried a recipe and it didn't work, we all just sucked it up and at it anyway no matter how many meals it might take.

I still do that. I'm loathe to throw out food. Collectively Americans waste more food than any other nation in the world. Individually this can average out to 30% of the calories we buy wasted. Think of how much money that might be? Some of us simply cannot justify tossing out that loaf of bread that didn't turn out right or that can of special mushrooms we bought when it turns out no one liked that recipe but one person.

9. You don't have money to purchase something as lovely to show your affection or respect for someone even after they have expressed a clear interest in that item.

Perhaps you know you can't cook that wonderful dish you saw or that your lover or kid told you about. You can always buy it, right? That depends who what you see.

If a see an image from a restaurant in our neighborhood or from a shop near us that is within our budget, sure I can hop out and get that. If it's for a special occasion, I m likely to order it or get it for a person I care about.

But what if it is a fancy meal at a restaurant halfway around the world? Do I feel bad about that or can I just enjoy the image? I hope most of us can just enjoy the image but that might always be the case.

Hopefully most of us aren't in the types of relationships where our partner/kids/family would berate us for not being able to buy that fancy food but again that isn't always the case.

Food is necessary to live but it is also very tightly connected to our self-image and the image others of about us.

Is there a way out of this food porn discrimination? Leave a comment with your ideas.

Friday, August 16, 2013

Bras Empowering Women

Hi, everyone!

Earlier one of my co-authors here wrote about bras, and I want to do that today with a twist: bras that can help women.

Bras Donated to Free the Girls
I'm specifically referring to the Free the Girls Foundation, which has a program that collects gently-used bras and sends them to organizations where their sales can help empower survivors of the worldwide "illegal sex trade," sometimes called "white slavery."  Local collections sites for this project were the topic of a front-page article in my local newspaper two weeks ago. Currently there are two drop sites in my town for this, so on Tuesday, August 13, 2013, I dropped off three "not even worn more than once" fancy bras.  Just because companies can't seem to sell bras that aren't a standard size, so I'm constantly having problems finding them for myself, doesn't mean the bras can't help someone else, right?

As I understand it, this project, featured on a CNN three-part series about the "illegal slave" trade, employs survivors of the "illegal sex trade" and helps them earn an income while engaging in business where they primarily, if not exclusively, interact with other women.  Why is this important?

To understand that, we have to think about economics, illegal sex trafficking, abuse, and women. I don't want to make this a huge post, so let me just write out a few ideas and share a few facts about these issues.  At the bottom of this essay I'll list online resources I consulted for you to look at further.  Slavery is also a subject I've studied throughout human history, and for that background information the sources would fill a book, so please just bear with my basic statements.

You've probably heard the headlines that right now in 2013 there are more people held in slavery than at any other time in human history.  There is a big problem with this statement. There are more people held/doing/involved/almost any verb you want right now than in any other time in human history, simply because the planet has a much higher population than at any other time in human history.  While factually true in terms of raw numbers, the statement is misleading.  What about percentage of the population?  That involves the very tricky issue of calculating not just populations but parts of populations in the past.  It is better to simply say that even though legal slavery is no longer recognized in most of the world, illegal slavery is still going on.

What is "illegal slavery?"  Slavery is a condition by which a human being is reduced to the status of an object or animal that can be bought and sold.  Note that it does not require social or legal backing, but throughout most of human history slavery was legally and socially promoted — not merely accepted, but promoted.  So "illegal slavery" is merely slavery that continues to exist in a society that has outlawed it.

This creates several problems that you might not think about.  When legal, when socially accepted/promoted, slavery has built-in enforcement, which has both negatives and positives for the owners and the slaves. Yup, I just typed that ... both negatives and positives for the owners and the slaves. What "illegal slavery" lacks are the open enforcement methods that everyone knows about and can use, whether it is a requirement for how much a seller needs to reveal to a potential buyer, to what is considered cruel treatment of slaves, to a slave's right to ask for asylum in a church, to the regulations involved in freeing someone and integrating them into the society at large.  When someone today is rescued from "illegal slavery," we often do not know how to integrate them back into society, if they were ever part of society to begin with.  Similarly, those who are found guilty of illegally enslaving another live their lives either in the shadows, creating false stories about their maids or field workers, and face the choice of jail or running away before they are caught.  They have very little incentive to treat those they enslave as much more than a disposable tool, because the illegal slave is really a piece of evidence to be used against them.

Let me be clear: I am not supporting slavery, merely pointing out that "illegal slavery" lacks many of the social and legal protections and restrictions for the enslaved, the traders, and the owners.

Another headline you may have read is that illegal slavery is about sex trafficking or forced prostitution in which the victims are women and girls.  This is a flashy headline, and it's certainly the one that Free the Girls is focused on, but it is far from the full picture.  While the child or teen girl being forced to service clients in the back room of seedy bars is a heart-rending image, many illegal slaves are boys and men, too, and many, many of them do basic labor or work as domestic staff.   Claims of percentages that do any particular type of labor should be viewed with a pound of salt, because "illegal" means the true numbers must be hidden for the trade to survive.  But it may also be misleading to assume that one type of work does not bleed over into other types of work for the enslaved.   A maid tricked into leaving her country may also be forced to perform sexually, or the man picking crops in a field may have to get extra food through sex acts.  Sadly, we may best understand illegal slavery as creating objects from people, and there are no limits to how an object may be used.

How do people end up illegal slaves?  There seem to be three primary methods.

The first is trickery — they believe they have a job, and then it turns out they signed a contract that they didn't fully understand, or they have a debt but have been offered a chance to "work it off."  In these cases the company or individual owning them rigs the system so that they have a hard time working off the debt or they are guarded heavily, their passports, wallets, and other means of independence taken away.  In a way this is a more extreme form of the "company town," which operated and still happens quite legally around the world.  When you need money to survive, you may have to do whatever you think is necessary, and people will take advantage of you if they can.

The second is family sale — it is not uncommon for parents to sell children, either for debt or for what they believe is job training.  Now we might say this is trickery, like the first method I mention; however, I also know that stories of "rescued" children given back to parents often end up resold.  To say that the parents or family are unaware seems difficult to believe in many cases.  Of course, once you are a child slave the role models that you have for what your life can be like are very limited, and it is likely easier to keep someone enslaved if they were acquired as a child.  Truly insidious, and very much like the generational slave systems of the past around the world.

The third method is straight-up kidnapping or forced co-dependence — this can involve drugs, beating, forms of brainwashing, and lies about families being dead or having sold the victim.  This seems to be the most popular "media" version of illegal slavery, though it can paint the victim as a bad person who made poor choices, versus the child slave or the tricked slave who just wanted to make a living.

In none of these cases is the survivor of illegal slavery to blame for their treatment.  Those of us looking at this from the outside may like to think we could see through the lies or not get caught up with "those sorts of people," or that our families love us enough to take care of us.  Slavery has been around for thousands of years, and the methods and means of enslavement are tested over and over, proven to work time and again.  That you are not an illegal slave may be a matter of luck more than a matter of how clever and loved you are.

So I've been rambling, and I apologize. Slavery, illegal or not, is a huge topic, and I'm certain I'll return to it again and again.  Let's get back to the connection between bras and the "illegal slave trade."

Free the Girls is one organization trying to fight against the very profitable and widespread "illegal slave trade" by using bras, an item that was very likely controlled by their illegal owners. Think about it.  Most of the survivors they held were used in the sex trade and even if they had other jobs we know that it is very likely they were also exploited sexually.  In many, many societies, the breast and anything associated with is often sexualized or connected to the woman's ability to reproduce. In both cases women's bodies are often subject to the control of men either directly or through the desire to seek their approval. If you fall victim to the "illegal slave trade" you are even more controlled and your body ceases to be under your ownership.  I don't know if Free the Girls is making this connection but I find it very powerful that they are helping women reclaim their bodies and decide what they wear in this way.

If you have some extra bras and want to help empower some of the female survivors of it, look them up and see if there is a drop-off spot in your town.  Please do check the resources below, because they all offer other ways to help and more specifics you might find useful, if horrifying.

1: Free the Girls
2: NJ.com article
3: NY Times Bits article
4: The Guardian article
5: Pravda article