Patel, Raj - Stuffed and Starved: The Hidden Battle for the World Food System

Apr 14, 2009 12:02

I found this to be very eye opening, but I also don't know much about global agriculture or environmental justice, so YMMV. I admit that I've been a bit skeptical of various environmental movements before, not because they're wrong, but because there are way too many examples of privileged white people espousing environmentalism while culturally ( Read more... )

nationality, food, a: patel raj, race/ethnicity/culture, recs: books, class, books, books: non-fiction, feminism

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oyceter April 16 2009, 03:04:50 UTC
Because I am totally procrastinating, I searched inside the book on UK Amazon. It has lots of results for "people of colour" but nothing for "non-white people," so I guess that's what he used in the book, unless the UK Amazon text is drawing from the US edition.

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oyceter April 16 2009, 03:05:39 UTC
I've got so freaking much to read....

I'm so with you!!

It's a really fascinating read, and I actually got through it pretty quickly, considering the non-fiction aspect (I go through non-fiction slower than fiction). But haha, yes to the stacks of stuff to-be-read.

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laurashapiro April 14 2009, 20:00:34 UTC
This sounds very interesting. The Omnivore's Dilemma, which covers some of the same topics, has a middle class, white, American point of view throughout: useful for discussing a lot of what's broken about the American food system, but painfully lacking on issues affecting people of color in this country, to say nothing of a global perspective.

That global perspective is critical to fixing food, so it's great that Patel's book offers it. Looking forward to checking it out.

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oyceter April 16 2009, 03:07:05 UTC
It's really interesting! I especially liked getting a look not just as the way food in the US works, but how it affects global farmers and infrastructures. A lot of it is still very US-focused, but that is because many of the large agricultural companies are USian (at least, that was my impression from the book). But the farmers affected are everywhere... he opens the book with Korean and Mexican farmers and how they're working together.

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laurashapiro April 16 2009, 20:16:59 UTC
Very cool. I'll have to see if my local foodie bookstore has a copy.

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sanguinity April 14 2009, 21:55:06 UTC
He endnoted "people of colour" when he was talking about Brazil. IIRC, the note was that "people of colour" in a Brazilian context is a gross simplification to the point of being highly questionable, but that he was using it this once anyway. (Don't trust me to not have mangled it; I honestly don't remember if he said why he was using it anyway, and I do know that he didn't say enough in that endnote for me to feel like I understood the nature of the issue.)

I don't remember him saying anything else about the term, but I also know that I didn't read every endnote.

:: but right now, I have more questions than answers. ::

Yeah. More and more, though, life seems to me to be the art of refining and reformulating the question. I don't think there's a way to shortcut that process.

Well, except live a long time, maybe. But that's not really a shortcut.

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oyceter April 15 2009, 08:53:42 UTC
Ooo, thanks for the notes! Sigh. This is why I should not write stuff up a month after I read them. I also skipped a lot of endnotes. (This is why I like footnotes! Less flipping around for me.)

Well, except live a long time, maybe. But that's not really a shortcut.

Heeeee. Alas!

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color_blue April 14 2009, 23:31:12 UTC
You reminded me that I never finished this book! *makes note*

One thing I took away from this book and others I've been reading (ex. Conquest, Dragon Ladies) is the power of bottom-up movements, how important it is for movements to focus on the people who are the most oppressed and have the least power in the system, because it generally seems easier to start there and end up with solutions that benefit everyone, whereas going from top-down tends to generate solutions that help those on top, but overlooks those on the bottom, particularly people who suffer more than one oppression.

Yes! I completely agree with this, and also think that bottom-up movements are the most likely to be dismissed or trivialized or ignored in mainstream media and education, just because of the way hierarchies work.

He notes that he prefers this term over "developing countries" or "third-world countries." I have the same problems he does with the prior two terms, and I like that "Global South" does not sound like it is passing judgment, but I think it ( ... )

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oyceter April 16 2009, 03:09:09 UTC
Yes! I am just realizing how much more I need to read on bottom-up movements and how you fund them and support them without compromising and etc.

And I'm very with you on terminology! And how "first" world nations have "third" world problems, like you cite, and just... yeah. And yet, I don't know what to do except footnote excessively, otherwise there is no vocab for discourse.

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