I've often wondered about the poor, stuck people who have to listen to her at meetings.

I don't mean to make light of a serious thing, but you'd think an afternoon listening to the incessant honk would make it harder for them to stay sober.
---
A Guide to Jack Monroe's 'The Poverty'
Dickensian Pov:
''More jam, mamapapa''
''We shall have a feast, SB''
Soot-covered children (with or without rickets)
Evil landlady
Yuletide Eels
WW1-WW2 Pov:
Military around the edges
Forces' pin-up
Angry strangers yelling 'should have kept your legs shut!'
Rosie the Riveter aesthetic
Lots of tins
Catherine Cookson
1970s Pov:
Retro desserts
Butlins
Caravan holidays
''That'll do''
Pretending to be from a Northern pit village
Aunty Pat aesthetic
1980s Pov:
Same as 1970s pov but includes -
Shoulder pads and big hair
Punk, failed attempts at
Thatcherite obsession with home ownership
Irish Pov:
Saoirse
Secretly approves of Orange Marches.
Dire potatoes
American Pov:
Coffee store
Prison tamales
Attempts to be 'discovered' for her singing talent
Hole (Courtney Love's band)
Free spirit biker
Please feel free to add anything. I've missed a lot of important Jack lore.