Synopses & Reviews
Is shopping for food really a political act?
Why is it that, in a world with enough food for everyone, more people than ever go hungry?
Why did the French resistance against genetically modified foods become a fight against McDonalds?
Why did the foot-and-mouth epidemic in the UK become a problem for consumers?
Capable of connecting human bodies to abstract nations, and techno-science to moral concerns, food has become one of the most contested fields of our time. It is high on the political agenda throughout the world. With disease, contamination, famine, hunger and imbalanced food markets all unfortunate realities, a book that interrogates the politics of food is long overdue.
From the BSE outbreak in the 1990s through to cultural taboos and the genetic modification of produce and livestock, this timely book raises provocative questions about how we relate to food in the 21st century. Recent food scandals and genetically modified organism controversies have shattered the idea that 'food is food' as we have always known it, and exposed fundamental dilemmas related to risk and control. Taking as its starting point the premise that food is politicized in arenas not commonly thought of as political, The Politics of Food explores issues surrounding the development of global food markets in underdeveloped nations and addresses recent events that have had a profound impact on how consumers feel about what they eat. The epidemic of foot-and-mouth disease that swept through the UK in 2001 spawned a series of questions concerning the real costs of cheap food. What lessons have been learned? And how are food choices linked to the politics of food markets?
With globalization, food has increasingly become entangled in webs of political significance. Through ethnographic case studies, this book reveals how food has come to serve a key role in political resistance, grassroots activism and nation-building. Anyone interested in globalization, food safety, or what food choices say about food politics will find this book essential reading.
Review
"This is a deeply rewarding collection of articles and insights. It reflects and draws brilliantly on contemporary social science's welcome return of interest to the subject of food." --Tim Lang, Professor of Food Policy, City University, London
"A refreshingly dispassionate look at politically explosive issues of risk, rights, identity, trade, globalization, and security. Avoiding polemics and advocacy, this collection offers clear and insightful analysis of how modern food problems are constructed and contested." --Warren Belasco, Editor of Food, Culture and Society, University of Maryland.
"The Politics of Food concretely demonstrates that local contexts do, in fact, shape larger settings, even as governments, corporations, social movements, and other institutions define the moral grounds of culture. Mapping social connections across a variety of sites, this book deepens our understanding of how food practices shape the human landscape." --Alice Julier, Smith College and President, Association for the Study of Food and Society.
"A sound collection of essays on an important contemporary political issue" --Alan Warde, University of Manchester.
Synopsis
Is shopping for food a political act? Capable of connecting bodies to nations and techno-science to philosophy, food is high on the global political agenda. Contamination and famine are unfortunate realities; this book, the first detailed study of the connection between food and politics, is long overdue. Starting with the premise that food is politicized in arenas not commonly thought of as political, The Politics of Food explores issues surrounding the development of global food markets in underdeveloped nations and addresses recent events, from BSE to genetic modification, that raise provocative questions about how we relate to food. This book reveals how food has come to serve a key role in political resistance, grassroots activism and nation-building.
Synopsis
Is shopping for food really a political act?
Why is it that, in a world with enough food for everyone, more people than ever go hungry?
Why did the French resistance against genetically modified foods become a fight against McDonalds?
Why did the foot-and-mouth epidemic in the UK become a problem for consumers?
Capable of connecting human bodies to abstract nations, and techno-science to moral concerns, food has become one of the most contested fields of our time. It is high on the political agenda throughout the world. With disease, contamination, famine, hunger and imbalanced food markets all unfortunate realities, a book that interrogates the politics of food is long overdue.
From the BSE outbreak in the 1990s through to cultural taboos and the genetic modification of produce and livestock, this timely book raises provocative questions about how we relate to food in the 21st century. Recent food scandals and genetically modified organism controversies have shattered the idea that 'food is food' as we have always known it, and exposed fundamental dilemmas related to risk and control. Taking as its starting point the premise that food is politicized in arenas not commonly thought of as political, The Politics of Food explores issues surrounding the development of global food markets in underdeveloped nations and addresses recent events that have had a profound impact on how consumers feel about what they eat. The epidemic of foot-and-mouth disease that swept through the UK in 2001 spawned a series of questions concerning the real costs of cheap food. What lessons have been learned? And how are food choices linked to the politics of food markets?
With globalization, food has increasingly become entangled in webs of political significance. Through ethnographic case studies, this book reveals how food has come to serve a key role in political resistance, grassroots activism and nation-building. Anyone interested in globalization, food safety, or what food choices say about food politics will find this book essential reading.
About the Author
Marianne E. Lien is Associate Professor in Social Anthropology, University of Oslo.
Brigitte Nerlich is Senior Research Officer at the Institute for the Study of Genetics, Biorisks and Society, University of Nottingham.
Table of Contents
The Politics of Food--Marianne E. Lien and Brigitte Nerlich * Introduction--Marianne E. Lien * The Politics of Food as Risk * Risk Handling in Food Consumption as Politics?--Bente Halkier * Foot and Mouth Disease and the Debate about Cheap Food--Brigitte Nerlich * Enjoyment and Choice in the Age of Risk: The Case of BSE in the Czech Republic--Haldis Haukanes * Food Politics and Biotechnology--Chaia Heller * Rhetorics of Food; Food as Nature, Commodity and Culture--Eivind Jacobsen * Food - Between the Body and the Nation * Western Food and the Making of the Japanese Nation State, 1872-1945--Katarzyna J. Cwiertka * The Politics of Taste and Smell--Efrat Ben-Ze'ev * Global Food Politics * The Political Economy of Food in an Unequal World--Keith Hart * Politics of Edibility--Marianne E. Lien * Grades and Standards in the Social Construction of Safe Food--Lawrence Busch * Epilogue--Anne Murcott