Knowing food and growing food: Beyond the production-consumption debate in the sociology of agriculture

被引:235
作者
Goodman, D [1 ]
DuPuis, EM
机构
[1] Univ Calif Santa Cruz, Dept Environm Studies, Santa Cruz, CA 95064 USA
[2] Univ Calif Santa Cruz, Dept Sociol, Santa Cruz, CA 95064 USA
基金
欧盟地平线“2020”;
关键词
D O I
10.1111/1467-9523.00199
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学]; K9 [地理];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
What does the rise of organic food as a social phenomenon mean politically? What political impact does this form of consumption have on society? Is it a small and unimportant "blip," in the overall march of globalized, industrialized food and rationalized consumption systems. Is it even, perhaps, complicit in this process? Or is it a radical break ? The array of answers to these questions forms the "production-consumption debate" currently taking place in the examination of agro-food systems. If agro-food networks are conceptualized as interactive, socio-ecological metabolic circuits linking agricultural nature, social labor, the corporeal and the symbolic, then this paper argues that analytical concern in agro-food studies has focused overwhelmingly on the production 'moment' in these circuits. Despite the lessons of numerous 'food scares', anti-GMO movements and the mad cow disease pandemic, an asymmetry now holds sway in agro-food studies between production and consumption even though in other fields, as Jackson (1999) notes, consumption has been "duly 'acknowledged" (p. 95). As this asymmetry is addressed, a contemporary reformulation of the 'agrarian question' might investigate the potential for new forms of progressive food politics, ranging from 'weak' struggles over the modes of social orderings, such as knowledge systems, to more formal alliances between producers and consumers.
引用
收藏
页码:5 / +
页数:19
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