ABSTRACT

In recent years, food studies scholarship has tended to focus on a number of increasingly abstract, largely unquestioned concepts with regard to how capital, markets and states organize and operate. This has led to a gulf between public policy and people’s realities with food as experienced in homes and on the streets. Through grounded case studies in seven Latin American countries, this book explores how development and social change in food and agriculture are fundamentally experiential, contingent and unpredictable.

In viewing development in food as a socio-political-material experience, the authors find new objects, intersubjectivities and associations. These reveal a multiplicity of processes, effects and affects largely absent in current academic literature and public policy debates. In their attention to the contingency and creativity found in households, neighbourhoods and social networks, as well as at the borders of human–nonhuman experience, the book explores how people diversely meet their food needs and passions while confronting the region’s most pressing social, health and environmental concerns.

chapter |20 pages

Introduction

Food embodiments, assemblages and intersubjectivities: ebbs and flows of critical food studies

chapter 1|13 pages

Embodiment and Reflexivity

Gaining insight into food lifeways through the chili cook-off in Ajijic, Mexico

chapter 3|12 pages

Finding the Food by Hiding the Gold

Andoque abundance, mining, and food in the Colombian Amazon

chapter 4|13 pages

Encounters with the Brazilian Soybean Boom

Transnational farmers and the Cerrado

chapter 5|13 pages

Affective Struggles in the Desert

Bringing water to bear on agriculture and food

chapter 6|13 pages

People, Cows and Milking Machines

Public policy and intersubjectivity in Ecuador

chapter 7|15 pages

Forgive me for being Human

Wirikuta nomadism and rebellious Peyote

chapter 8|12 pages

Feeding Paradise?

Corporeal food citizenship in the Galapagos

chapter 10|12 pages

Deepening Relationships through Bio-intensive Food

AgroSano in Oaxaca

chapter 11|16 pages

Public Good

Wheat assemblages and the revalorization of culinary and handicraft practice in Bio-Bio, Chile

chapter 12|15 pages

Affectivity in Public Procurement

The case of New Dawn Cooperative and the elderly in Argentina

chapter 13|14 pages

Assembling Responsible Food Markets

The case of Cooperativa La Manzana in southern Chile

chapter 14|13 pages

250,000 Families Campaign

The existence of flavor and taste

chapter 15|13 pages

Conclusion

The vitality of everyday food