Laurier2011a

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Laurier2011a
BibType ARTICLE
Key Laurier2011a
Author(s) Eric Laurier, Sally Wiggins
Title Finishing the family meal: The interactional organisation of satiety
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, Food, Family, Meal, Children, Satiety
Publisher
Year 2011
Language English
City
Month
Journal Appetite
Volume 56
Number 1
Pages 53–64
URL Link
DOI 10.1016/j.appet.2010.11.138
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

This paper provides an extended review of psychological, sociological and interactional research on mealtimes and satiety (fullness), arguing for a focus on how fullness and finishing a meal is interactionally achieved. Drawing on three specimen data fragments from contrasting family settings, routinely used resources for pursuing completion and expressing satiety are described. We show how checks on completion are tailored to children according to their age, the intimate knowledge family members have of one another and attuned to contingencies, such as, whether there is a further course to be offered. Equally, that in teaching children how to eat together with others, the family also transmits and transforms all manner of other eating practices such as how to comply, or not, with requests to finish. A central aim of the article is to complement the many studies of satiety that have explained its physiological aspects by providing the familial logics that are expressed in bringing the meal to a close. We offer a suggestive analysis, based on conversation analytic principles, to illustrate our argument and to provide a starting point for further work in this field. Where bodies of work have previously used mealtimes as a convenient setting for accessing other social practices, this article turns its focus back toward the tasks of dining together.

Notes