37.513, FYI: Call for Abstracts - Edited Volume: “Language and Food: Macro, Meso and Micro Analysis of Food Discourse”
The LINGUIST List
linguist at listserv.linguistlist.org
Fri Feb 6 16:05:02 UTC 2026
LINGUIST List: Vol-37-513. Fri Feb 06 2026. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.
Subject: 37.513, FYI: Call for Abstracts - Edited Volume: “Language and Food: Macro, Meso and Micro Analysis of Food Discourse”
Moderator: Steven Moran (linguist at linguistlist.org)
Managing Editor: Valeriia Vyshnevetska
Team: Helen Aristar-Dry, Mara Baccaro, Daniel Swanson
Jobs: jobs at linguistlist.org | Conferences: callconf at linguistlist.org | Pubs: pubs at linguistlist.org
Homepage: http://linguistlist.org
Editor for this issue: Daniel Swanson <daniel at linguistlist.org>
================================================================
Date: 06-Feb-2026
From: Daniela Cesiri [daniela.cesiri at unive.it]
Subject: Call for Abstracts - Edited Volume: “Language and Food: Macro, Meso and Micro Analysis of Food Discourse”
Editors
Takako Kawabata
tk70 at soas.ac.uk
Daniela Cesiri
daniela.cesiri at unive.it
Call for Abstracts
Overview and scope
Language and food both function as semiotic systems that rely on
shared conventions to convey meaning and to organize social life. As
Roland Barthes (2008: 24) argued, food is not simply nourishment but
“a system of communication, a body of images, a protocol of usages,
situations, and behavior.” In much the same way, language is never a
neutral tool. It structures perception, mediates social relationships,
and encodes the values, hierarchies, and ideologies of a community.
Eating, just like a form of communication such as language, is
therefore always both a material and a symbolic act.
The parallels between language and food extend across social,
cultural, and political dimensions. Both are shaped by norms that
define what counts as appropriate, authentic, refined, or desirable.
Bourdieu’s (1984) work on taste demonstrates how linguistic and
culinary preferences function as forms of cultural capital, marking
social distinction and reproducing inequality. Accents, registers, and
genres may index prestige in language, just as particular cuisines,
ingredients, or eating practices do in food cultures.
Language and food are also powerful resources for identity-making
(Gordon & Tovares, 2024). Through the ways in which people speak about
food, choose what to eat, and represent culinary practices,
individuals and communities express belonging, difference, and
hybridity. As Appadurai (1981) and Cabral et al. (2025) argue,
gastro-politics highlights how food practices are deeply entangled
with power, nationalism, and globalization, while sociolinguistic work
on style and performance shows how identities are actively produced
through linguistic choices (Coupland, 2007).
These processes are especially visible in contexts of migration,
tourism, media circulation, and cultural branding, where food and
language travel together and acquire new meanings in order to shape a
certain image of the destination and, thus, attract the prospective
visitor’s or customer’s attention.
The relationship between language and food begins early in life, when
cries and gestures signal hunger and comfort, and continues throughout
adulthood in everyday practices of shopping, cooking, ordering,
evaluating, and sharing food. Genres of food discourse, ranging from
family mealtime conversations to restaurant menus, cookbooks,
television shows, and online reviews, shape how taste, authenticity,
health, and value are understood (Gerhardt, 2013). As Barthes (2008)
again notes, food-related meanings must be studied wherever they
appear, in economic practices, technologies, advertising, and in the
mental and symbolic life of society.
Both language and food are dynamic and constantly changing. They are
reshaped through contact, migration, and media, and they circulate
within broader political and economic structures. The borrowing of
words parallels the blending of cuisines, while discourses of “proper
language” and “authentic food” often serve to legitimize certain norms
and marginalize others. This fluidity challenges static understandings
of culture and value and calls for a process-oriented approach to
meaning-making that accounts for circulation, contestation, and change
(Järlehed & Moriarty, 2018).
Bringing these domains together, the interdisciplinary field of
language and food studies examines how practices of speaking, writing,
and representation intersect with practices of eating, cooking, and
sharing (Riley & Paugh, 2018). At a global scale, food discourse plays
a central role in constructing cultural identity, nationalism, and
belonging. Cuisines are marketed as authentic for tourism, culinary
terms move across languages, and food metaphors permeate political
speech and everyday idioms. As researchers demonstrate, food
circulates alongside discourse, shaping values and power relations at
both local and global levels (Scarpato & Daniele, 2004).
This edited volume aims to advance and consolidate the growing field
of language and food studies by bringing together interdisciplinary
perspectives from linguistic anthropology, sociolinguistics, discourse
studies, food studies, cultural studies, and communication research.
The volume explores the co-constitutive relationship between language
and food and examines how they jointly produce, circulate, and
transform meaning and value in social life (Karrebæk et al., 2018).
Food is approached not only as a material object or cultural practice,
but also as a communicative resource through which identities,
emotions, moral positions, and political stances are expressed.
The main aims of the volume are fourfold. First, it seeks to
consolidate scholarship on language and food by showcasing a wide
range of empirical and theoretical approaches. Second, it aims to
foster dialogue across disciplines by building conceptual bridges
between sociolinguistics, linguistic anthropology, discourse studies,
and food studies. Third, it foregrounds global and multilingual
perspectives, highlighting case studies from diverse cultural and
linguistic contexts. Finally, the volume aims to serve as a valuable
resource for scholars, students, and practitioners interested in how
language and food intersect in everyday life, institutions, and global
processes.
What We’re Looking For
We invite contributions that analyze food discourse at the micro,
meso, and/or macro levels. We welcome both empirical and theoretical
works that reflect a wide range of approaches and methods.
Contributions from all relevant disciplines are encouraged, including
linguistics, sociology, political science, economics, tourism studies,
and ecology. Possible topics include, but are not limited to, the
following:
Micro Level: Producers, Consumers, and Individuals
This level focuses on how individuals and small groups produce,
interpret, and negotiate food-related meanings through language in
specific contexts, such as:
- Everyday food talk (ordering, tasting, evaluating, recommending)
- Language, taste, and sensory experience
- Food, emotion, affect, and memory
- Storytelling around food
- Identity performance through food discourse
- Digital food practices (reviews, vlogs, and social media posts)
- Multilingual and intercultural food practices
Meso Level: Institutions, Organizations, and Communities
This level examines how institutions and communities shape, regulate,
mediate, and standardize food-related discourse, such as:
- Community-based food practices
- Professional and institutional food discourse
- Norms, expertise, and authority in food communication
- Heritage food organizations and certification bodies
- Alternative food networks
- Media and mediated representations
- Media genres (menus, cookbooks, food journalism, television shows)
Macro Level: Ideologies, Histories, and Policies
This level addresses how food-related meanings are shaped by broader
ideological, historical, and political-economic forces, often
operating across borders and over time, such as:
- Heritage, authenticity, and tradition
- Political economy of food
- Governance, regulation, and power
- Food in nationalist, populist, and geopolitical discourse
- Colonial and postcolonial food histories
- Migration, globalization, and cultural identity
- Crisis, sustainability, and environmental discourses
Submission Guidelines
Please submit an abstract of 300–350 words outlining your research
questions, focus, methodology, theoretical framework, and key
contributions. Each abstract should include a proposed working title
and 5–7 keywords. Please also include a short author biography
(maximum 100 words) with your institutional affiliation, relevant
research interests, and email address.
Please submit/upload your abstract and biography here: Language and
Food_Abstract submission
- Abstract length: 300–350 words (excluding references)
- Abstract submission deadline: May 1, 2026
- Notification of acceptance: June 1, 2026
- Full chapter submission deadline: December 1, 2026
- Chapter length: Up to 7,000 words (including references)
All submissions must be original and must not be under review or
published elsewhere.
References
Appadurai, A. (1981). Gastro-Politics in Hindu South Asia. American
Ethnologist, 8(3), 494–511.
Appadurai, A. (1988). How to Make a National Cuisine: Cookbooks in
Contemporary India. Comparative Studies in Society and History, 30(1),
3–24. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0010417500015024
Barthes, R. (2008). Toward a psychosociology of contemporary food
consumption. In Food and Culture (2nd edition, pp. 28–35). Routledge.
https://www.scribd.com/document/437691856/Barthes
Bourdieu, P. (1984). Distinction: A social critique of the judgement
of taste (R. Nice, Trans.). Routledge.
Cabral, Ó., Lavrador, L., Orduna, P., & Moreira, R. (2025). From the
kitchen to the embassy: A rapid review of gastronomic approaches in
diplomacy. Place Branding and Public Diplomacy, 21(2), 259–271.
https://doi.org/10.1057/s41254-024-00363-4
Coupland, N. (2007). Style: Language Variation and Identity. Cambridge
University Press.
Gerhardt, C. (2013). Food and language – language and food. In C.
Gerhardt, M. Frobenius, & S. Ley (Eds.), Culinary linguistics: The
Chef’s Special (Culture and Language Use: Studies in Anthropological
Linguistics 10) (Vol. 10, pp. 3–50). John Benjamins Publishing
Company. https://doi.org/10.1075/clu.10.01ger
Gordon, C., & Tovares, A. (2024, August). Identity, Ideology, and the
Language of Food. Oxford University Press.
https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780197762530.013.6
Järlehed, J., & Moriarty, M. (2018). Culture and class in a glass:
Scaling the semiofoodscape. Language & Communication, 62, 26.
Karrebæk, M. S., Riley, K. C., & Cavanaugh, J. R. (2018). Food and
Language: Production, Consumption, and Circulation of Meaning and
Value. Annual Review of Anthropology, 47, 17–32.
Riley, K. C., & Paugh, A. L. (2018). Food and Language: Discourses and
Foodways across Cultures. Routledge.
https://www.routledge.com/Food-and-Language-Discourses-and-Foodways-across-Cultures/Riley-Paugh/p/book/9781138907010
Scarpato, R., & Daniele, R. (2004). New global cuisine: Tourism,
authenticity and sense of place in postmodern gastronomy. In Food
tourism around the world. Food Tourism Around the World., 296–313.
Linguistic Field(s): Anthropological Linguistics
Discourse Analysis
Pragmatics
Sociolinguistics
Text/Corpus Linguistics
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
********************** LINGUIST List Support ***********************
Please consider donating to the Linguist List, a U.S. 501(c)(3) not for profit organization:
https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=87C2AXTVC4PP8
LINGUIST List is supported by the following publishers:
Bloomsbury Publishing http://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/
Cambridge University Press http://www.cambridge.org/linguistics
Cascadilla Press http://www.cascadilla.com/
De Gruyter Brill https://www.degruyterbrill.com/?changeLang=en
Edinburgh University Press http://www.edinburghuniversitypress.com
John Benjamins http://www.benjamins.com/
Language Science Press http://langsci-press.org
Lincom GmbH https://lincom-shop.eu/
MIT Press http://mitpress.mit.edu/
Multilingual Matters http://www.multilingual-matters.com/
Narr Francke Attempto Verlag GmbH + Co. KG http://www.narr.de/
Netherlands Graduate School of Linguistics / Landelijke (LOT) http://www.lotpublications.nl/
Peter Lang AG http://www.peterlang.com
SIL International Publications http://www.sil.org/resources/publications
----------------------------------------------------------
LINGUIST List: Vol-37-513
----------------------------------------------------------
More information about the LINGUIST
mailing list