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The Ecopolitics of Consumption H. Louise Davis

The Ecopolitics of Consumption By H. Louise Davis

The Ecopolitics of Consumption by H. Louise Davis


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Summary

This collection adds to the field of ecocritical theory by merging multidisciplinary approaches to food studies with the established ecocritical discourse of culture and the environment. With themes of confinement and control in the global industrial food systems, this book explores the role of consumption and commodification in contemporary life.

The Ecopolitics of Consumption Summary

The Ecopolitics of Consumption: The Food Trade by H. Louise Davis

Today's highly industrialized and technologically controlled global food systems dominate our lives, shaping our access and attitudes towards food and deeply influencing and defining our identities. At the same time, these food systems are profoundly and destructively impacting the health of the environment and threatening all of us, human and nonhuman, who must subsist in ecological conditions of increasing fragility and scarcity. This collection examines and exposes the myriad ways that the food systems, driven by global commodity capitalism and its imperative of growth at any cost, increasingly controls us and conforms us to our roles as consumers and producers. This collection covers a range of topics from the excess of consumers in the post-industrial world and the often unacknowledged yet intrinsic connection of their consumption to the growing ecological and health crises in developing nations, to topics of surveillance and control of human and nonhuman bodies through food, to the deep linkages of cultural values and norms toward food to the myriad crises we face on a global scale.

The Ecopolitics of Consumption Reviews

A visceral, timely and deeply unsettling exploration of the malaise endemic to the global food system. This wonderful collection of essays bravely seeks to revitalize the concept of ecopolitics for our current era of neoliberal expansion. -- Tulasi Srinivas, Emerson College; Author of the award winning Curried Cultures: Globalization, Food and South Asia

About H. Louise Davis

H. Louise Davis is associate professor of American studies and chair of the Integrative Studies Department at Miami University of Ohio. Karyn Pilgrim is an associate professor of cultural studies at SUNY Empire State College. Madhudaya Sinha is lecturer in the Integrative Studies Department at Miami University of Ohio.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1: Introduction Chapter 2: Oodles of Noodles: Nestle India and the Maggi Consumer Nightmare Madhu Sinha Chapter 3: Spectacles of Revulsion: The Challenges of Bush-Tucker as Contemporary Cuisine Nicole Anae Chapter 4: Pets or Food?: Unstable Object Lessons in Barbara Kingsolver's Animal, Vegetable, Miracle Karyn Pilgrim Chapter 5: Agvocates for Industry: Citizen-Farmers, Social Media, and the Gendered Production of Food Cori Brewster Chapter 6: The Politics of Food Behind Bars Salvador Jimenez Murgia Chapter 7: Live Feeds: Surveillance and the Food-Industrial Complex Daniel Grinberg Chapter 8: What Grows in Silicon Valley? The Emerging Ideology of Food Technology Christopher Miles & Nancy Smith Chapter 9: Necessity is the Mother of Invention: Cuba's Quest for Food Security in the Twenty-First Century Melanie Zeigler and Walt Vanderbush Chapter 10: The Political Economy of Food Production: The Low-Input Alternative to the Capital System's High-Input Structural Dynamics Robert Drury King Chapter 11: He Who Feeds You Will Also Impose His Will on You: Food Sovereignty Versus the Free Market H. Louise Davis About the Contributors

Additional information

NLS9781498519977
9781498519977
1498519970
The Ecopolitics of Consumption: The Food Trade by H. Louise Davis
New
Paperback
Lexington Books
2019-04-12
228
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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