Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1108/00070701311314200
Title: "You must finish your dinner": Meal time dynamics between grandparents, parents and grandchildren in urban China
Authors: Goh, E.C.L. 
Keywords: Children (age groups)
Children's agency
China
Family life
Food products
Grandparents
Parent-child dynamics
Parents
Social dynamics
Issue Date: 2013
Citation: Goh, E.C.L. (2013). "You must finish your dinner": Meal time dynamics between grandparents, parents and grandchildren in urban China. British Food Journal 115 (3) : 365-376. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1108/00070701311314200
Abstract: Purpose: By using food consumption as a kaleidoscope, the aim of this paper is to illustrate the bidirectional and dialectical interactions among caregivers and between single children and their multiple caregivers in Xiamen. Design/methodology/approach: This paper reports findings from in-depth interviews with grandparents and parents (n=33) from ten three-generational families and parents (n=20) from ten nuclear families with single children between six and nine years old. Findings: Grandparents unequivocally accorded supreme importance to ensuring a child finishes his/her meals while parents tended to hold slightly more liberal views. These differences created higher conflict and tensions between the caregivers in three-generational families as compared to nuclear households. Children in multigenerational families were more frequently force-fed by adult-caregivers whereas their counterparts were more capable of feeding themselves during meal times. Research limitations/implications: This exploratory study provides in-depth insights but carries the limitation of generalisability. Future research can apply similar methodology on bigger samples so as to ascertain a better estimation of the extent of stress and tension across generations over meal times in urban China. Practical implications: The initial finding reported in this paper is useful for public health workers and family life educators in China to help families with children of middle childhood to manage tension arising from meal times. Originality/value: Diverging from most parenting research which tends to focus on parent-child dynamics, this paper included three generations - grandparents, parents, grandchildren - in the research conceptualization. This is important as grandparents are integral parts of childrearing in China. © Emerald Group Publishing Limited.
Source Title: British Food Journal
URI: http://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/50249
ISSN: 0007070X
DOI: 10.1108/00070701311314200
Appears in Collections:Staff Publications

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