TY - JOUR
T1 - Food Insecurity in Singapore
T2 - The Communicative (Dis)Value of the Lived Experiences of the Poor
AU - Tan, Naomi
AU - Kaur-Gill, Satveer
AU - Dutta, Mohan J.
AU - Venkataraman, Nina
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 Taylor & Francis.
PY - 2017/8/3
Y1 - 2017/8/3
N2 - Food insecurity is a form of health disparity that results in adverse health outcomes, particularly among disenfranchised and vulnerable populations. Using the culture-centered approach, this article engages with issues of food insecurity, health, and poverty among the low-income community in Singapore. Through 30 in-depth interviews, the narratives of the food insecure are privileged in articulating their lived experiences of food insecurity and in co-constructing meanings of health informed by their sociocultural context, in a space that typically renders them invisible. Arguing that poverty is communicatively sustained through the erasure of subaltern voices from mainstream discourses and policy platforms, we ask the research question: What are the meanings of food insecurity in the everyday experiences of health among the poor in Singapore? Our findings demonstrate that the meanings of health among the food insecure are constituted in culture and materiality, structurally constrained, and ultimately complexify their negotiations of health and health decision making.
AB - Food insecurity is a form of health disparity that results in adverse health outcomes, particularly among disenfranchised and vulnerable populations. Using the culture-centered approach, this article engages with issues of food insecurity, health, and poverty among the low-income community in Singapore. Through 30 in-depth interviews, the narratives of the food insecure are privileged in articulating their lived experiences of food insecurity and in co-constructing meanings of health informed by their sociocultural context, in a space that typically renders them invisible. Arguing that poverty is communicatively sustained through the erasure of subaltern voices from mainstream discourses and policy platforms, we ask the research question: What are the meanings of food insecurity in the everyday experiences of health among the poor in Singapore? Our findings demonstrate that the meanings of health among the food insecure are constituted in culture and materiality, structurally constrained, and ultimately complexify their negotiations of health and health decision making.
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U2 - 10.1080/10410236.2016.1196416
DO - 10.1080/10410236.2016.1196416
M3 - Article
C2 - 27463999
AN - SCOPUS:84980025339
SN - 1041-0236
VL - 32
SP - 954
EP - 962
JO - Health Communication
JF - Health Communication
IS - 8
ER -