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El. knyga: Taste, Waste and the New Materiality of Food

  • Formatas: 246 pages
  • Serija: Critical Food Studies
  • Išleidimo metai: 16-Nov-2018
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780429755194
  • Formatas: 246 pages
  • Serija: Critical Food Studies
  • Išleidimo metai: 16-Nov-2018
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780429755194

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Anthropocentric thinking produces fractured ecological perspectives that can perpetuate destructive, wasteful behaviours. Learning to recognize the entangled nature of our everyday relationships with food can encourage ethical ecological thinking and lay the foundations for more sustainable lifestyles.

This book analyses ethnographic data gathered from participants in Alternative Food Networks from farmers’ markets to community gardens, agricultural shows and food redistribution services. Drawing on theoretical insights from political ecology, eco-feminism, ecological humanities, human geography and critical food studies, the author demonstrates the sticky and enduring nature of anthropocentric discourses. Chapters in this book experiment with alternative grammars to support and amplify ecologically attuned practices of human and more-than-human togetherness. In times of increasing climate variability, this book calls for alternative ontologies and world-making practices centred on food which encourage agility and adaptability and are shown to be enacted through playful tinkering guided by an ethic of convivial dignity.

This innovative book offers a valuable insight into food networks and sustainability which will be useful core reading for courses focusing on critical food studies, food ecology and environmental studies.

Acknowledgements viii
1 Introduction
1(22)
Introduction
1(1)
Food in the city: exploring ethico-political potentialities
2(2)
Encountering food in Canberra, Australia
4(2)
Sketching out the theoretical terrain: attuning to material relations
6(7)
Mapping the flows
13(6)
References
19(4)
2 An appetiser: eating, being and playing with convivial dignity
23(28)
Introduction
23(1)
Digesting the material world
24(3)
Alternative subjects in the Anthropocene: narrativising material matters
27(3)
Material-semiotic experimentation: the pursuit of playful variations
30(9)
Understanding convivial dignity
39(5)
Conclusion
44(2)
References
46(5)
3 Introducing Taste
51(18)
Introduction
51(1)
Embodying taste
52(3)
The shaping of tastes
55(8)
Playful experimentations with taste
63(2)
Conclusion
65(1)
References
66(3)
4 Growing a taste for togetherness
69(22)
Introduction
69(1)
The emergence of urban agriculture
70(2)
Tastes of togetherness in lively relations
72(7)
Tasting the past, adaptive presents and uncertain futures
79(3)
Playing with the pleasures of taste
82(2)
Expanding gustatory tastes, making do and encountering the unknown
84(2)
Conclusion
86(1)
References
87(4)
5 Taste in shopping
91(26)
Introduction
91(1)
Caring in alternative food networks
92(6)
A taste for AFNs
98(9)
A feel for uncertainty
107(5)
A taste for adaptability
112(1)
Conclusion
113(1)
References
114(3)
6 Taste in competition
117(18)
Introduction
117(1)
Situating agricultural shows
118(3)
The spectacle of the Royal Canberra Show
121(1)
Taste, judging and being moved at the show
122(7)
Relational tastes on show
129(2)
Conclusion
131(2)
References
133(2)
7 Introducing waste
135(22)
Introduction
135(1)
Confronting excess: the generative potential of encounters with wastes vitalities
136(3)
Food flows: placing, removing and obscuring
139(3)
Conceptualising food waste
142(3)
The affective force of visceral encounters with food waste
145(6)
Conclusion
151(2)
References
153(4)
8 Waste in the home
157(26)
Introduction
157(1)
The affective force of food waste in homes
157(3)
The trouble with food waste reduction campaigns
160(3)
Moving and being moved by food
163(9)
Appreciating abundance and scarcity
172(7)
Conclusion
179(2)
References
181(2)
9 Composting in the home
183(16)
Introduction
183(1)
The propositional nature of compost
184(4)
Compost as risky togetherness-in-relation: beyond attachment and detachment
188(7)
Conclusion
195(1)
References
196(3)
10 Ugly food and food waste redistribution
199(20)
Introduction
199(1)
Challenging aesthetic standards with ugly food
200(5)
Food redistribution: deferring responsibility for surplus
205(8)
Food rescue and householder waste reduction: valuing the vitality of human and nonhuman inputs
213(3)
Conclusion
216(2)
References
218(1)
11 New grammars for the Anthropocene: Playful tinkering with convivial dignity
219(10)
Introduction
219(2)
Risky play: tinkering with alternative conceptions of the Anthropos
221(1)
Narrativising non-anthropocentric subjects and practices
222(1)
Playing with semantics: the affective force of convivial dignity
223(1)
Learnings from and with the fieldwork
224(2)
References
226(3)
Index 229
Bethaney Turner is Assistant Professor in International Studies at the University of Canberra, Australia