Abstract
This article contributes to Gender Work and Organization‘s Special Themed Section on Foodwork, by addressing the intersects of race, gender and class in representations of labour, whiteness and neoliberalism in popular and digital food cultures. The discussion responds to the journal’s call for papers by examining the clean eating trend as a vehicle for the ideals of white femininity, and the techniques of femininity that are employed to convey messages of normalcy and exceptionalism in this contemporary popular food culture. In the analysis of an article in the high‐end home interiors magazine, Elle Decoration, the visual authoritativeness of clean eating advocates is considered to highlight the strategies and devices used to deploy ideals of white femininity and to create boundaries around a remodelled white female neoliberal self. The article aims to advance current debates regarding digital foodwork, by examining the aesthetics of whiteness that are contained within the message of relatability communicated by social media food influencers. Thus, in keeping with the broader concerns of the journal, the article addresses developments in the fields of gender and digital labour, with respect to the overwhelming dominance of privileged white women in this sphere and the aesthetics of their labour, which has thus far received limited attention within existing debates.
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