Food Chains: From Farmyard to Shopping Cart
 
Product details:

ISBN13:9780812221343
ISBN10:0812221346
Binding:Paperback
No. of pages:304 pages
Size:229x152 mm
Weight:666 g
Language:English
Illustrations: 26 illus.
700
Category:

Food Chains

From Farmyard to Shopping Cart
 
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press
Date of Publication:
Number of Volumes: Print PDF
 
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Short description:

This collection of fascinating historical case studies reveals the remarkable inner workings of the modern food provisioning system and the complex web of institutions that move food from the farm to the dinner table.

Long description:

In recent years, the integrity of food production and distribution has become an issue of wide social concern. The media frequently report on cases of food contamination as well as on the risks of hormones and cloning. Journalists, documentary filmmakers, and activists have had their say, but until now a survey of the latest research on the history of the modern food-provisioning system—the network that connects farms and fields to supermarkets and the dining table—has been unavailable. In Food Chains, Warren Belasco and Roger Horowitz present a collection of fascinating case studies that reveal the historical underpinnings and institutional arrangements that compose this system.

The dozen essays in Food Chains range widely in subject, from the pig, poultry, and seafood industries to the origins of the shopping cart. The book examines what it took to put ice in nineteenth-century refrigerators, why Soviet citizens could buy ice cream whenever they wanted, what made Mexican food popular in France, and why Americans turned to commercial pet food in place of table scraps for their dogs and cats. Food Chains goes behind the grocery shelves, explaining why Americans in the early twentieth century preferred to buy bread rather than make it and how Southerners learned to like self-serve shopping. Taken together, these essays demonstrate the value of a historical perspective on the modern food-provisioning system.



"Food Chains is a significant achievement, reflecting original work from a variety of disciplines and offering penetrating insights on the complex connections among the different components of food-supply chains."
Table of Contents:

1. Making Food Chains: The Book

—Roger Horowitz

PART I. OVERVIEW

2. How Much Depends on Dinner?

—Warren Belasco

3. Analyzing Commodity Chains: Linkages or Restraints?

—Shane Hamilton

PART II. ANIMALS

4. Lard to Lean: Making the Meat-Type Hog in Post-World War II America

—J. L. Anderson

5. The Chicken, the Factory Farm and the Supermarket: The Emergence of the Modern Poultry Industry in Britain

—Andrew C. Godley and Bridget Williams

6. Trading Quality, Producing Value: Crabmeat, HACCP, and Global Seafood Trade

—Kelly Feltault

PART III. PROCESSING

7. Anchovy Sauce and Pickled Tripe: Exporting Civilized Food in the Colonial Atlantic World

—Richard R. Wilk

8. What's Left at the Bottom of the Glass: The Quest for Purity and the Development of the American Natural Ice Industry

—Jonathan Rees

9. Provisioning Man's Best Friend: The Early Years of the American Pet Food Industry, 1870-1942

—Katherine C. Grier

10. Empire of Ice Cream: How Life Became Sweeter in the Postwar Soviet Union

—Jenny Leigh Smith

11. Eating Mexican in a Global Age: The Politics and Production of Ethnic Food

—Jeffrey M. Pilcher

PART IV. SALES

12. The Aristocracy of the Market Basket: Self-Service Food Shopping in the New South

—Lisa C. Tolbert

13. Making Markets Marxist? The East European Grocery Store from Rationing to Rationality to Rationalizations

—Patrick Hyder Patterson

14. Tools and Spaces: Food and Cooking in Working-Class Neighborhoods, 1880-1930

—Katherine Leonard Turner

15. Wheeling One's Groceries Around the Store: The Invention of the Shopping Cart, 1936-1953

—Catherine Grandclément

Notes

List of Contributors