Browsing by Author "Giacoman, Claudia"
Now showing 1 - 3 of 3
Results Per Page
Sort Options
- ItemBecoming vegan: A study of career and habitus(SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD, 2021) Giacoman, Claudia; Alfaro, Juan; Aguilera Bornand, Isabel Margarita; Torres, RodrigoThis article aims to understand the stages of adopting veganism in young people. To achieve this objective, we analyze 30 biographical interviews with young vegans in Santiago, Chile. The participant's stories allow us to identify that the transition to this new lifestyle implies acquiring a secondary habitus, that is, a gradual shift in understanding and acting in the world, which entails progressive identity changes until becoming vegan. This transition consists of five steps: personal questioning, vegetarianism attempt, vegetarianism, veganism, and activism. This path constitutes a career process but presents nuances according to the young people's social class of origin and individual characteristics. The main contribution of this article is to delve into the career stages that lead to the consolidation of a vegan identity, based on two classical sociological concepts (career and habitus).
- ItemDance to resist: emotions and protest in Lindy Hop dancers during October 2019 Chilean rallies(ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD, 2021) Giacoman, Claudia; Torres, RodrigoOn 18 October 2019, a mass revolt began in Chile against the results of the neoliberal political and economic system. In the context of strong repression by the police, different artistic manifestations appeared as an expression of opposition to the government. This included concerts, performances, street theater and dance as political action. In this article, we present the case of a community of Lindy Hop dancers to explain the meaning given to dancing in public spaces as a protest action during this Chilean social crisis. Using an auto-ethnographic approach, we show that hoppers redefined their dance practices in public spaces as an act of resistance to state violence, from a political and an emotional perspective. However, these actions generated conflict within the hopper community, and the legitimacy of such practice was brought into question.
- ItemVegan on a low budget: enacting identity through cuisine in an internet community(ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD, 2023) Giacoman, Claudia; Alfaro, Juan; Joustra, Camila; Aguilera, Isabel M.The adoption of veganism implies a change in food practices. This study investigates how low-budget people lead a vegan lifestyle. Using Bourdieu's habitus and food sociology concepts, we analyze 884 posts on a Chilean Facebook group, in which members share low-budget vegan recipes. Our results show that low-income people enact veganism mainly by constructing cuisine based on their social class and avoiding animal consumption products. The definition of this cuisine continues to be a battleground in terms of practices considered legitimately vegan, regardless of poverty. This article contributes sociologically by deepening our understanding of everyday practices that help enact veganism in non-hegemonic positions, how individuals forge their social identity, and the role of cuisine in adopting a vegan lifestyle.