Skip navigation
  • Home
  • Browse
    • Communities
      & Collections
    • Browse Items by:
    • Publication Date
    • Author
    • Title
    • Subject
    • Department
  • Sign on to:
    • My MacSphere
    • Receive email
      updates
    • Edit Profile


McMaster University Home Page
  1. MacSphere
  2. Open Access Dissertations and Theses Community
  3. Open Access Dissertations and Theses
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/24025
Title: Health Practices and the Paleo Diet: Understanding Healthy Eating from Paleo Adopters' Perspectives
Authors: Peters, Amanda
Advisor: Gillett, James
Department: Sociology
Keywords: Health Practices;Healthy Eating;Food;Diet;Paleo Diet;Symbolic Interaction;Qualitative
Publication Date: 2019
Abstract: In the context of expanding public concern about the healthfulness of food, this thesis examines how health is understood and taken up in individuals’ everyday activities of eating. Sociological frameworks emphasize the complex relations shaping health practices in context; however, a greater focus on the structured nature of practice has weakened appreciation of the agent. Food scholars investigating choice and constructions of healthy food and eating categories, highlight processes involving meaning, experience, action, and identity, at work in contexts of healthy eating. To better locate the agent of health practices, and to connect a health practices approach to healthy eating scholarship, this study draws on theory and methods from the symbolic interactionist tradition in an analysis of lived experiences of healthy eating. Using ethnographic data, including qualitative interviews with 18 adopters of the Paleo Diet, and analysis techniques from grounded theory, this study aims to add nuance to current sociological understandings of health practices. Findings reveal that subjective understandings of the relationship between food and health evolve through interpretive processes involving meaning. By connecting cultural understandings of health to personal, embodied experiences, adopters achieve multilayered understandings of healthy eating that legitimate and catalyze their commitment to their diet. Facing challenges to achieving a Paleo diet, adopters, as agents, engage in material and symbolic work to create “doable” and “livable” versions of Paleo better aligned with resources, preferences, and understandings. Adopters also construct and work to maintain valued identities surrounding their practice; however, Paleo identities are spoiled identities, as adopters sought to manage conflicting expectations of what constitutes healthy eating, and impressions of who eats a Paleo diet. This thesis demonstrates how an interactionist perspective that appreciates the processual, subjective, and interactional elements of agents’ situated and contextual practices, can be usefully brought in to investigate and inform understandings of activities affecting health.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/24025
Appears in Collections:Open Access Dissertations and Theses

Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormat 
Peters_Amanda_FinalSubmission2018November_PhD.pdf
Open Access
1.55 MBAdobe PDFView/Open
Show full item record Statistics


Items in MacSphere are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

Sherman Centre for Digital Scholarship     McMaster University Libraries
©2022 McMaster University, 1280 Main Street West, Hamilton, Ontario L8S 4L8 | 905-525-9140 | Contact Us | Terms of Use & Privacy Policy | Feedback

Report Accessibility Issue