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Global Appetites: American Power and the Literature of Food

Global Appetites: American Power and the Literature of Food

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Allison Carruth
Cambridge University Press
Edition: Reprint, 4/6/2017
EAN 9781316613306, ISBN10: 1316613305

Paperback, 262 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 1.7 cm
Language: English

Global Appetites explores how industrial agriculture and countercultural food movements underpin US conceptions of global power in the century since the First World War. Allison Carruth's study centers on what she terms the 'literature of food' - a body of work that comprises literary realism, late modernism and magical realism along with culinary writing, food memoir and advertising. Through analysis of American texts ranging from Willa Cather's novel O Pioneers! (1913) to Novella Carpenter's non-fiction work Farm City (2009), Carruth argues that stories about how the United States cultivates, distributes and consumes food imbue it with the power to transform social and ecological systems around the world. Lively and accessible, this interdisciplinary study will appeal to scholars of American literature and culture as well as those working in the fields of food studies, food policy, agriculture history, social justice and the environmental humanities.

1. Introduction
the power of food
2. Rural modernity
Willa Cather and the rise of agribusiness
3. 'Luxury feeding' and war rations
food writing at mid-century
4. Supermarkets and exotic foods
Toni Morrison's 'chocolate eater'
5. Post-industrial pastoral
Ruth Ozeki and the new muckrakers
6. Conclusion
food writing in the age of information
Bibliography
Notes
Index.