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Full Description
Anthropocene Ecologies of Food provides a detailed exploration of cross-cultural aspects of food production, culinary practices, and their ecological underpinning in culture. The authors draw connections between humans and the entire process of global food production, focusing on the broad implications these processes have within the geographical and cultural context of India. Each chapter analyzes and critiques existing agricultural/food practices, and representations of aspects of food through various media (such as film, literature, and new media) as they relate to global issues generally and Indian contexts specifically, correcting the omission of analyses focused on the Global South in virtually all of the work that has been done on "Anthropocene ecologies of food." This unique volume employs an ecocritical framework that connects food with the land, in physical and virtual communities, and the book as a whole interrogates the meanings and implications of the Anthropocene itself.
Contents
Introduction: Food Systems and Ecological Well-Being - S. Susan Deborah
Part I: Bioregion, Diversity, Food
Rice and the Anthropocene in the Southern Indian Peninsula - Nirmal Selvamony
The Taste of Place: Food, Ecology, and Culture in Kodagu - Subarna De
This Compost! India and the History of Global Organic Farming - Mart A. Stewart
Part II: Intercultural Food Practices
Environmental Food Documentaries: From Fast Food Nation to a Popular Selection of Top 20 YouTube Videos - Pat Brereton
Bacalhau in England and Goa: A Case Study of Economy, Ecology, and the Assignation of Value in the Global South, circa 1472-2019 - William Spates
The Future of Food: Trajectories in Paolo Bacigalupi's The Windup Girl - Young-hyun Lee
Metaphors and Metonymies of Food in Four Asian Texts - Chitra Sankaran
Part C: Crises, Disintegration, Food
Agrarian Distress and Food Sovereignty in the Anthropocene: A Reading of Namita Waikar's The Long March - P. Rajitha Venugopal
Dalit Food, Ecology, and Resistance - Samuel Moses Srinivas Kuntam
Afterword: Toward Shifts in Global Food Systems - Simon C. Estok