1 / 13

Chinese Food Culture

Chinese Food Culture. Dining: Cross-Cultural Differences. West: Individualists: Independence Rectangular or square tables: Focus is eating Fixed helpings, compartmentalized East: Communities: Collective Harmony Interdependence: Relationship building Round tables: Eating is socializing

pebbles
Télécharger la présentation

Chinese Food Culture

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chinese Food Culture

  2. Dining: Cross-Cultural Differences • West: Individualists: Independence • Rectangular or square tables: Focus is eating • Fixed helpings, compartmentalized • East: Communities: Collective Harmony • Interdependence: Relationship building • Round tables: Eating is socializing • Table corners are not good: Awkward • Fuzzy personal boundaries “Collective Enjoyment”

  3. The actual Eating • Seating position & power: Where do you sit? • Generally seat facing the front door is preferred • How to determine power? • It’s the host who gave the invitation • It’s the person who orders and pays • Power order: Form older men to younger men • When unsure who should sit where, pause • Stand around until the powerful one sits you

  4. Concrete Aspects of Food • Developmental Perspectives • Provide Food & Feeding is Caring: Love • Food is Relationship • Food is Comfort • Food as Ceremonial Rituals • Food is Conflict Resolution • Food is Power, Prestige & Status

  5. Developmental Perspectives • Baby’s first instinctive need is feeding • Eating is a basic need next to oxygen & water • Mother’s body is programmed to nurse • Caring of child through breast-feeding • There is bonding with child: Imprinting • Deprivation & Fear if neglected

  6. Provide Food & Feeding is Caring: Love • A good mother provides Feeding • A good father works hard to “Feed the family” • Timely & sensitive food service is “Care” • Serving food on your plate: “Love” • Feeding & Caring of the sick is “Love” • “Good Food equals Good Care”? • “More Food equals More Love”? • “Expensive Food equals More Love”?

  7. Food is Relationship • “More Food equals More Status” • “Expensive Food equals Higher Status” • “Fresh Food equals Better Love”

  8. Food is Comfort • From positive post-natal experience • Baby cries, mother feeds baby giving comfort • Timely feeding satisfied hunger • Timely feeding brings comfort • Food that mimics early nursing experience • Soft foods that requires less chewing • Milk-shake, ice cream, cream cheese chocolates

  9. Food as Ceremonial Rituals • Red-eggs & Ginger banquets 滿月酒 • Wedding banquets 喜宴 • Post-Funeral banquets • Success-Celebration banquets

  10. Food is Conflict Resolution • Business is conducted over a meal • “Negotiation Meals” 講數 • “Reconciliation Banquets” 和頭酒 • Food is Power • Control by Food withdrawal • “No one can make me Eat” • Hunger Strike • Eating Disorders: Anorexia Nervosa vs. Bulimia

  11. Food is Power, Prestige & Status

  12. Food & Eating is Life

  13. Food is Control • When Food is

More Related