Contemporary Vestals in the Masterchef’s Kitchen: Doing and Undoing Gender in Domestic Food Practices
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International Sociological Association
Abstract
This article aims to analyse how domestic food practices, along with the associated motivations and behaviour
patterns, either reinforce or challenge binary gender models in households. The theoretical framework
is based on Harold Garfinkel’s (1967) concept of ‘doing gender’ and contemporary studies (Ehlert, 2021;
Pettersson & Heldt, 2014; Szabo, 2014) that highlight tensions between cultural patterns defining gender roles
in the kitchen and phenomena contributing to the blurring of gender inequalities in everyday life. Qualitative
data (individual in-depth interviews) collected in two separate studies conducted in Poland between 2020
and 2022 were used as the research material. The analysis of this material reveals two key figures: the Vestal,
referring to women who assume responsibility for others and are focused on the domestic hearth, and the
Masterchef, who is typically male and engages in cooking only occasionally. Emerging trends, such as men’s
increasing attention to the body and food, the growing importance of declaring shared responsibilities, and
shifting attitudes towards cooking as a leisure activity, do not yet appear to be leading to fundamental changes
in the processes through which gender is constructed or deconstructed in relation to domestic life and food
practices.
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Keywords
domestic food practices, doing gender
Citation
The International Journal of Sociology of Agriculture and Food Publishing Home vol. 32 (1), 2026, 149-167
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