Modes of eating and phased routinisation: insect-based food practices in the Netherlands
Modes of eating and phased routinisation: insect-based food practices in the Netherlands
Sociological research on sustainable consumption has seen widespread application of theories of practice (‘practice theories’) as a means of transcending the limitations of epistemologically individualistic ‘behaviour change’ approaches. While in many ways the central insights of practice theories vis-a-vis consumption are now well established, this article argues that the approach holds further insights for sociological analysis of food consumption in general, and of novel foods in particular. Based on empirical research with consumers of a range of insect-based convenience foods in the Netherlands, this article introduces two practice-theoretic concepts – ‘modes of eating’ and ‘phased routinisation’ – which contribute to sociological theorisations of how food practices are established, maintained, interdepend and change. Beyond its theoretical contribution, the article substantively extends research literatures on the introduction, uptake and normalisation of insect-based and other novel foods.
451-467
House, Jonas
d12ff336-7b23-4143-8c47-2b2bc072352e
1 June 2019
House, Jonas
d12ff336-7b23-4143-8c47-2b2bc072352e
House, Jonas
(2019)
Modes of eating and phased routinisation: insect-based food practices in the Netherlands.
Sociology, 53 (3), .
(doi:10.1177/0038038518797498).
Abstract
Sociological research on sustainable consumption has seen widespread application of theories of practice (‘practice theories’) as a means of transcending the limitations of epistemologically individualistic ‘behaviour change’ approaches. While in many ways the central insights of practice theories vis-a-vis consumption are now well established, this article argues that the approach holds further insights for sociological analysis of food consumption in general, and of novel foods in particular. Based on empirical research with consumers of a range of insect-based convenience foods in the Netherlands, this article introduces two practice-theoretic concepts – ‘modes of eating’ and ‘phased routinisation’ – which contribute to sociological theorisations of how food practices are established, maintained, interdepend and change. Beyond its theoretical contribution, the article substantively extends research literatures on the introduction, uptake and normalisation of insect-based and other novel foods.
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Published date: 1 June 2019
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Local EPrints ID: 504898
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/504898
ISSN: 0038-0385
PURE UUID: 5748a3eb-3517-44b1-bea8-2598f5bb75e5
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Date deposited: 22 Sep 2025 16:40
Last modified: 23 Sep 2025 02:22
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Jonas House
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