Feminising veganism: why food is political and gendered

The soy boy trope is getting old...

Sophie Campbell
23rd March 2026
Image Source: Dupe, Lauren Morgan
In recent years it has been a rising trend to be more eco-conscious as well as becoming more aware of what we are putting into our bodies. With the rise of ‘Veganuary’, (first coined in 2014) and vegan retreats including the popular Vegan Camp Out festival founded in 2016 by Jordan Martin, veganism has really taken the world by storm. However, the rise in veganism has not been completely smooth sailing, like the political backlash due to the plant-based diet seemingly not fulfilling protein, substance and vitamin needs. But post the most important politics of food is the idea that a vegan diet is only fit for a woman.

Gender has always played a huge role across society and day to day decisions, and this is no different when dietary choices come into play. The idea that veganism correlates with femininity is something which has caused fractures in the communities of this dietary choice. Not only is this idea incorrect, but it feeds into the toxic portrayals of masculinity, which you can now see more debate surrounding this in society and social media.

When men decide to become vegan there are more social repercussions, as through beliefs taught by a patriarchal society, men are stereotyped as the stronger sex and choosing a diet which centres around the care for animals means showing emotions which have become branded as ‘feminine’. These capitalistic sexist ideas mean that for men to become vegan it is not only stopping consumption of animal products but also rejecting traditional gender norms that have been forced upon society for centuries.

Food is often painted politically due to society marginalising people based off thoughts constructed over time. This is not only seen with plant-based diets and gender, but also with drinking culture, with cocktails being viewed as feminine and beer being masculine, or in the coffee industry where milky coffees or flavoured drinks are seen as unsuitable for ‘real men’. The reasoning behind food being gendered and the presence of gender stereotyping within the food industry is a puzzle. As with all typecasting there is no true reason behind it other than it is the ideas society has been raised on, and ones that have lasted so long that to get rid of them is to abandon an inbuilt belief system.

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