Blog

You can find here practical as well as more theoretical blogs related to sustainability and especially to healthy and sustainable food, dietary supplements, consumption and lifestyle.

Topics and issues discussed in blogs are approached mainly from personal, social and cultural perspective and apply primarily to the Belgian context.

Although the overall purpose of blogs is to help you gain a better, more critical and objective understanding and knowledge of sustainability, healthy consumption and lifestyle, the main goal of practical blogs is to facilitate and support the right and healthy choices and consumer behavior.

Have a good and inspiring read!

Call: Do you have insightful and inspiring ideas, personal experience and practical tips and tricks about how to make consumption overall more sustainable and how to apply it in daily life? Do you enjoy writing and would you like to share your ideas and insights and help others? Send us your text/blog (minimum of 800 words) to info@thrivesustainably.com and we might post it on our platform!

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Bio food as a regressively progressive phenomenon

Bio food as a regressively progressive phenomenon

Investigating bio food through people’s personal, bodily and everyday relation with it, I was able to understand as it exists in (daily) reality – as it really is – not just what people tell about it and what circulates about it in the discourse. This embodied,...

Biosociality: bodily shared sociality of bio food

Biosociality: bodily shared sociality of bio food

In my other blogs on bio food in Belgium, I have explored  bio food through people’s personal and bodily relation with it. I have dealt with how people bodily relate to and experience this food, how its sociocultural aspects (symbolic incorporation) have to be...

Self-control and the sustainable ethic of bio food

Self-control and the sustainable ethic of bio food

In the previous blog, I discussed two of bio food’s three most salient features associated with bio – its naturalness and health benefits. Now it remains to analyse its third characteristic and that is its ethicality.  Indeed, bio food is deemed ethical not only...

Bio food’s inherent value and the nature-culture division

Bio food’s inherent value and the nature-culture division

I argue that in bio food’s edible materiality lies its inherent value. Indeed, bio food consumers take a particular interest in this materiality (Roe 2006). Although ‘value’ is one of those abused terms, when basically anything can have a ‘value’, especially in...

Representation, food incorporation and embodied experience

Representation, food incorporation and embodied experience

Food incorporation, identification and classification are real processes, which engage our body as well as mind (self). They shape us, and give rise to experiences, which are bodily and lived. In the process of both symbolic and literal incorporation, actual food...

The sense of taste, taste, hunger, appetite, disgust and nausea

The sense of taste, taste, hunger, appetite, disgust and nausea

The sense of taste and taste have to be taken together in their differences in order to really understand the complexity of our bodily relation with food and see how culture, society, the self and the body are integrated. We cannot really understand and explain...

Human complex, ambiguous and uncertain relation with food

Human complex, ambiguous and uncertain relation with food

To understand today’s complexity of food and human complicated relation with food, we need to start from human nature concerning food, that is, biologically determined mechanisms, tendencies and behaviours which determine our relation with food. Only then we can...

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