Published June 2026 | Version v1
Thesis Open

Eating Well In Uncertain Times: Food, Attunement, And Everyday Care Among Chinese International Students

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  • 1. University of Chicago

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Description

This study examines how Chinese international students in the United States mobilize everyday food practices as a form of embodied self-care under conditions of structural uncertainty. Drawing on food journals and semi-structured interviews with nine participants conducted during the spring quarter of 2026, this article argues that eating and cooking function as attunement: an ongoing, pre-discursive process of bodily orientation that becomes visible precisely when it breaks down. The analysis is organized around two concepts from Chinese cultural and medical frameworks. Attunement (调理, tiáo lǐ) designates a habitual, largely unreflective alignment of the body with the rhythms of daily life, absorbed through years of family feeding practices rather than formal instruction, operating below the level of conscious reasoning as a background bodily grammar. Self-guided attuning (自我调节, zì wǒ tiáo jié) designates what happens when that orientation breaks down: a deliberate, effortful attempt to reorient oneself when circumstances have made ordinary life difficult to inhabit. Together, the two concepts allow for a more granular account of self-care than either habit or agency alone can provide. Three analytical chapters develop this argument. The first traces the intergenerational transmission of standards for eating well and how those standards travel across displacement, continuing to organize evaluations of food even when the conditions for meeting them have changed. The second examines cooking as an active practice of care irreducible to its nutritional outcomes, attending to how the act of making food structures time, generates satisfaction, and reconstitutes a sense of continuity. The third asks what structural conditions constrain these practices, including food cost, academic time pressure, and distance from family, introducing what the study calls a ceiling on attunement: the persistent friction that structural precarity imposes on the very practices through which students seek to manage it. The study adopts a reflexive methodological stance. The author is one of the nine participants, and his own experience of disrupted attunement during data collection shaped both the research design and the analytical framework, treated not as a complication to be bracketed but as a source of ethnographic depth. Findings suggest that for this population, food organizes daily life, sustains moral coherence, and carries relational and memorial weight where other forms of support are unavailable. What attending closely to these ordinary practices reveals is something about what it actually costs to live through conditions not of one's own making, and what it means that people keep trying anyway. The study contributes to anthropological literature on embodied self-care, food and migration, and the lived dimensions of structural precarity.

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UChicago Information

Division(s)
Social Sciences Division
Department(s)
MA Program in the Social Sciences (MAPSS)