Family life in grocery stores – a study of interaction between adults and children

Today the family is seen as a unit for food choice and consumption. The influence of family members on food choice comprises several stages that can be carried out both in the private home and in the public sphere, such as the grocery store. This makes the grocery store a context in which ordinary family life can be observed. The aim was to study families and the interaction between children and adults in the grocery store, focusing on young people's involvement in food shopping. Hidden observation and family interview methods were used. A total of 338 people were observed in seven different grocery stores in Stockholm during the summer and autumn of 2003. Seven family interviews, involving a total of 29 persons, were conducted in Uppsala in the spring of 2003. In the interviews, parents reported avoiding shopping for food together with children as they experienced it as stressful and exhausting. The observations showed that family life in the grocery store comprises not only the food purchase, but also bringing up children and consumer education. Young people's involvement in the food purchase varied depending on their age and the specific product. The different behaviour observed may be interpreted as reflecting the variation in ways of bringing up children at home. Another conclusion is that a public place such the grocery store facilitates pedagogical situations and can work as a tool for informal education.

[1]  P. Palojoki,et al.  The complexity of food choices in an everyday context , 2001 .

[2]  Eric Schlosser,et al.  Fast Food Nation: What the All-American Meal is Doing to the World , 2001 .

[3]  A. Coakley Food or ‘virtual’ food? The construction of children's food in a global economy , 2003 .

[4]  Christina Lee,et al.  Measuring influence in the family decision making process using an observational method , 1998 .

[5]  E. P. Cathcart,et al.  Food and Nutrition , 1938, Washington Information Directory 2019–2020.

[6]  Safiek Mokhlis,et al.  Consumer socialization, social structural factors and decision‐making styles: a case study of adolescents in Malaysia , 2003 .

[7]  Peter Jackson Consumption and identity: The cultural politics of shopping , 1999 .

[8]  C. Holmberg Stores and consumers : two perspectives on food purchasing , 1996 .

[9]  Anne Murcott,et al.  On the social significance of the “cooked dinner” in South Wales , 1982 .

[10]  R. Wilkes,et al.  Adolescent-Parent Interaction in Family Decision Making , 1997 .

[11]  C. Grbich Socialisation and Social Change: A Critique of Three Positions , 1990 .

[12]  Anna De Fina,et al.  The ethnographic interview , 2019, The Routledge Handbook of Linguistic Ethnography.

[13]  David Marshall,et al.  Food Availability and The European Consumer , 2001 .

[14]  S. Bakewell-Sachs,et al.  Learning to ask. , 1999, Journal of obstetric, gynecologic, and neonatal nursing : JOGNN.

[15]  Nickie Charles,et al.  Women, Food, and Families. , 1988 .

[16]  Ellen R. Foxman,et al.  Adolescents' and Mothers' Perceptions of Relative Influence in Family Purchase Decisions: Patterns of Agreement and Disagreement , 1988 .

[17]  P. Wright £8·95 Paul Fieldhouse Food and nutrition: Customs and culture , 1987, Appetite.

[18]  M. DeVault,et al.  Feeding the Family: The Social Organization of Caring as Gendered Work. , 1992 .

[19]  Karin M. Ekström,et al.  Family Members' Perceptions of Adolescents' Influence in Family Decision Making , 1989 .

[20]  Michael A. Belch,et al.  Parental and teenage child influences in family decision making , 1985 .

[21]  Children's influence in family decision making : a study of yielding, consumer learning and consumer socialization , 1995 .

[22]  Martyn Hammersley,et al.  Ethnography : Principles in Practice , 1983 .

[23]  Chin Woo Jung Fast Food Nation: What the All-American Meal is Doing to the World , 2002, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[24]  M. Agar The professional stranger : an informal introduction to ethnography , 1981 .