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Nanhai Food Stories.: Edible Explorations of a Place in Transition

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

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Nanhai Food Stories. Edible Explorations of a Place in Transition. / Pollastri, Serena; Lujan Escalante, Male; Meng, Tong.
2018. Paper presented at Cumulus Wuxi 2018, Wuxi, China.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

Harvard

Pollastri, S, Lujan Escalante, M & Meng, T 2018, 'Nanhai Food Stories. Edible Explorations of a Place in Transition', Paper presented at Cumulus Wuxi 2018, Wuxi, China, 31/10/18 - 4/11/18.

APA

Pollastri, S., Lujan Escalante, M., & Meng, T. (2018). Nanhai Food Stories. Edible Explorations of a Place in Transition. Paper presented at Cumulus Wuxi 2018, Wuxi, China.

Vancouver

Pollastri S, Lujan Escalante M, Meng T. Nanhai Food Stories. Edible Explorations of a Place in Transition. 2018. Paper presented at Cumulus Wuxi 2018, Wuxi, China.

Author

Pollastri, Serena ; Lujan Escalante, Male ; Meng, Tong. / Nanhai Food Stories. Edible Explorations of a Place in Transition. Paper presented at Cumulus Wuxi 2018, Wuxi, China.

Bibtex

@conference{d120d2bb9443477e98859f44b3fe2091,
title = "Nanhai Food Stories.: Edible Explorations of a Place in Transition",
abstract = "Nanhai, in Shandong Province, could be described as either a new district (新区) or a ghost town (鬼城), depending on whether the focus is on its promises or on its emptiness. Like other similar sites in China, Nanhai is a place in transition, suspended in a liminal space between its rural past and its metropolitan future. While literature on new or ghost towns in China tends to focus on their urban form (see for example Shepard, 2015), what tends to be forgotten is how people inhabit, shape, and negotiate place. Indeed, liminal places like Nanhai can hardly be described as cities, because they present themselves rather as a fluid combination of village and high-rise lives. In Nanhai, various communities with different origins, temporalities, and reasons for being there coexist. The food that these communities produce, prepare, and eat can be seen as a marker of social and cultural identities: a way of marking differences but also building connections (Appadurai Arjun, 1981; Lupton, 1996, p. 30). We propose that tracing food patterns, histories, and mobilities can help to capture and appreciate Nanhai, beyond its mere urban form. This paper presents a Research through Design (Frankel & Racine, 2010; Frayling, 1993) approach that seeks to explore and understand the identity of Nanhai through its food stories, and that experiments with ways of sharing these stories through design actions and artefacts. It will introduce a theoretical framework for the proposed approach and discuss how this contribute to debates of transition towards culturally significant sustainable and desirable lifestyles. By describing the outcomes of a recent student exhibition organised as an exploratory first research activity, the paper will present and discuss some example of food story listening and telling (Valsecchi, Pollastri, Tassi, & Chueng-Nainby, 2016). These examples include artefacts such as games and playful packaging that have been designed as a way of making food stories visible and interactive. Finally, as the first public presentation of a novel research programme, the paper will bring some open questions to the debate on design opportunities for places in transition and will aim to generate further discussion on this topic.",
keywords = "Food, Ghost Cities, Sustainable Futures, Game Design, Design education, China",
author = "Serena Pollastri and {Lujan Escalante}, Male and Tong Meng",
year = "2018",
month = oct,
day = "31",
language = "English",
note = "Cumulus Wuxi 2018 : Diffused Transitions, Design Opportunities ; Conference date: 31-10-2018 Through 04-11-2018",
url = "http://cumuluswuxi2018.org/",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Nanhai Food Stories.

T2 - Cumulus Wuxi 2018

AU - Pollastri, Serena

AU - Lujan Escalante, Male

AU - Meng, Tong

PY - 2018/10/31

Y1 - 2018/10/31

N2 - Nanhai, in Shandong Province, could be described as either a new district (新区) or a ghost town (鬼城), depending on whether the focus is on its promises or on its emptiness. Like other similar sites in China, Nanhai is a place in transition, suspended in a liminal space between its rural past and its metropolitan future. While literature on new or ghost towns in China tends to focus on their urban form (see for example Shepard, 2015), what tends to be forgotten is how people inhabit, shape, and negotiate place. Indeed, liminal places like Nanhai can hardly be described as cities, because they present themselves rather as a fluid combination of village and high-rise lives. In Nanhai, various communities with different origins, temporalities, and reasons for being there coexist. The food that these communities produce, prepare, and eat can be seen as a marker of social and cultural identities: a way of marking differences but also building connections (Appadurai Arjun, 1981; Lupton, 1996, p. 30). We propose that tracing food patterns, histories, and mobilities can help to capture and appreciate Nanhai, beyond its mere urban form. This paper presents a Research through Design (Frankel & Racine, 2010; Frayling, 1993) approach that seeks to explore and understand the identity of Nanhai through its food stories, and that experiments with ways of sharing these stories through design actions and artefacts. It will introduce a theoretical framework for the proposed approach and discuss how this contribute to debates of transition towards culturally significant sustainable and desirable lifestyles. By describing the outcomes of a recent student exhibition organised as an exploratory first research activity, the paper will present and discuss some example of food story listening and telling (Valsecchi, Pollastri, Tassi, & Chueng-Nainby, 2016). These examples include artefacts such as games and playful packaging that have been designed as a way of making food stories visible and interactive. Finally, as the first public presentation of a novel research programme, the paper will bring some open questions to the debate on design opportunities for places in transition and will aim to generate further discussion on this topic.

AB - Nanhai, in Shandong Province, could be described as either a new district (新区) or a ghost town (鬼城), depending on whether the focus is on its promises or on its emptiness. Like other similar sites in China, Nanhai is a place in transition, suspended in a liminal space between its rural past and its metropolitan future. While literature on new or ghost towns in China tends to focus on their urban form (see for example Shepard, 2015), what tends to be forgotten is how people inhabit, shape, and negotiate place. Indeed, liminal places like Nanhai can hardly be described as cities, because they present themselves rather as a fluid combination of village and high-rise lives. In Nanhai, various communities with different origins, temporalities, and reasons for being there coexist. The food that these communities produce, prepare, and eat can be seen as a marker of social and cultural identities: a way of marking differences but also building connections (Appadurai Arjun, 1981; Lupton, 1996, p. 30). We propose that tracing food patterns, histories, and mobilities can help to capture and appreciate Nanhai, beyond its mere urban form. This paper presents a Research through Design (Frankel & Racine, 2010; Frayling, 1993) approach that seeks to explore and understand the identity of Nanhai through its food stories, and that experiments with ways of sharing these stories through design actions and artefacts. It will introduce a theoretical framework for the proposed approach and discuss how this contribute to debates of transition towards culturally significant sustainable and desirable lifestyles. By describing the outcomes of a recent student exhibition organised as an exploratory first research activity, the paper will present and discuss some example of food story listening and telling (Valsecchi, Pollastri, Tassi, & Chueng-Nainby, 2016). These examples include artefacts such as games and playful packaging that have been designed as a way of making food stories visible and interactive. Finally, as the first public presentation of a novel research programme, the paper will bring some open questions to the debate on design opportunities for places in transition and will aim to generate further discussion on this topic.

KW - Food

KW - Ghost Cities

KW - Sustainable Futures

KW - Game Design

KW - Design education

KW - China

M3 - Conference paper

Y2 - 31 October 2018 through 4 November 2018

ER -