The Politics of the Pantry

Stories, Food, and Social Change

By Michael Mikulak
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Hardcover : 9780773542761, 268 pages, August 2013
Ebook (PDF) : 9780773590175, 208 pages, October 2013
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780773590182, 208 pages, October 2013

A timely examination of the sustainable food movement and its relationship to capitalism, value, and pleasure.

Description

"What's for dinner?" has always been a complicated question. The locavore movement has politicized food and challenged us to rethink the answer in new and radical ways. These days, questions about where our food comes from have moved beyond 100-mile-dieters into the mainstream. Celebrity chefs Jamie Oliver and Alice Waters, alternative food gurus such as Michael Pollan, and numerous other popular and academic commentators have all talked about the importance of understanding the sources and transformation of food on a human scale. In The Politics of the Pantry, Michael Mikulak interrogates these narratives - what he calls "storied food" - in food culture. As with any story, however, it is important to ask: who is telling it? Who is the audience? What assumptions are being made? Mikulak examines competing narratives of food, pleasure, sustainability, and value that have emerged from the growing sustainable food movement as well as food's past and present relationship to environmentalism in order to understand the potential and the limits of food politics. He also considers whether or not sustainable food practices can address questions about health, environmental sustainability, and local economic development, while at the same time articulating an ethical globalization. An innovative blend of academic analysis, poetic celebration, and autobiography, The Politics of the Pantry provides anyone interested in the future of food and the emergence of a green economy with a better understanding of how what we eat is transforming the world.

Reviews

“Mikulak undertakes a very difficult and tenuous task by trying to bridge elements of the popular imaginary on food and academic analysis, by showing how the two combine to contribute to a more robust, hopeful and sustainable future. (…) His writing has a

"Mikulak's multifaceted theoretical approach eschews the either/or in favour of the “both,” giving us a richer understanding of the environment and its relationship to food. This is a deeply intelligent, wonderfully written book." Jo Littler, Centre for C

"The Politics of the Pantry is beautifully written, engaging, and full of interesting and insightful twists and turns. I’d happily recommend this book to anyone grappling with the complicated questions of sustainability as it applies to food, agriculture, and knowledge." Michael Carolan, Department of Sociology, Colorado State University

“Providing a useful synthesis of environmental and food studies readings, an engaging personal element through his own foodshed memoir, and a rich bibliography, The Politics of the Pantry will engage social and cultural theorists, food studies scholars, a