Savoring Alternative Food

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A01=Jessica Hayes-Conroy
Alternative food
Alternative Food Activists
Alternative Food Initiatives
Alternative Food Movement
Author_Jessica Hayes-Conroy
Black Food
Care Takers
Category=JBCC4
Chef Event
community nutrition
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Food activism
Food and gender
Food Decisions
Food difference
Food Education
Food Identities
food justice
food pedagogy
Food sociology
Guthman 2008b
intersectionality in food activism
Kid Food
Kim's Husband
Kitchen Classrooms
Make Food Decisions
Middle School Aged Children
Nova Scotia
Pepperoni Pizza
Picky Eater
qualitative fieldwork
Rural Nova Scotia
School gardens
sensory ethnography
SGCP
Slow food
social inequality
Social Science Research
Visceral Difference
White Food
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415844239
  • Weight: 430g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 23 Sep 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Advocates of the alternative food movement often insist that food is our "common ground" – that through the very basic human need to eat, we all become entwined in a network of mutual solidarity. In this challenging book, the author explores the contradictions and shortcomings of alternative food activism by examining specific endeavours of the movement through various lenses of social difference – including class, race, gender, and age.

While the solidarity adage has inspired many, it is shown that this has also had the unfortunate effect of promoting sameness over difference, eschewing inequities in an effort to focus on being "together at the table". The author explores questions of who belongs at the table of alternative food, and who gets to decide what is eaten there; and what is at stake when alternative food practices become the model for what is right to eat? Case studies are presented based on fieldwork in two distinct loci of alternative food organizing: school gardens and slow food movements in Berkeley, California and rural Nova Scotia. The stories take social difference as a starting point, but they also focus specifically on the complexities of sensory experience – how material bodies take up social difference, both confirming and disrupting it, in the visceral processes of eating.

Overall the book demonstrates the importance of moving beyond a promotion of universal "shoulds" of eating, and towards a practice of food activism that is more sensitive to issues of social and material difference.

Jessica Hayes-Conroy is Assistant Professor of Women’s Studies, Hobart & William Smith Colleges, Geneva, New York, USA.

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