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Historic (rec.food.historic) Discussing and discovering how food was made and prepared way back when--From ancient times down until (& possibly including or even going slightly beyond) the times when industrial revolution began to change our lives. |
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There are some useful history books on this subject:
Warren Belasco's _Appetite for Change: How the Counterculture Took on the Food Industry_ views the food reform movement of the 1960s and 1970s as many of the previous respondents do: as a leftist, pro-environmental, anti-corporate crusade against agribusiness and the food industry. James Whorton's _Crusaders for Fitness_ looks at the health reform tradition in America that originated in the first half of the 19th century. (He discusses Graham, Kellogg, etc.) Although the book does not go beyond the 1920s, in the book's conclusion and in other writings, he links the post-1960s food reform movement to this tradition. He sees the movement as basically concerned with health and, in particular, with fears about the impact of urban-industrial society on health. Next month, I believe, an article that I wrote on the subject will be published in Robert Johnston's _Politics of Healing_, an anthology of articles on alternative medicine in the US in the 20th century. I examine (what I call) the modern health foods movement, which originated in the 1930s in the wake of the discovery of vitamins and related nutritional matters. (The organic foods movement in the US was one part of this movement.) I discuss both the scientific aspect of the movement, and the ideological aspect (which is definitely anti-modernist and pro-environmental, but not fundamentally leftist -- in the 1950s the movement had close links to the far right). Although my articles stops in 1965, I believe that the food ideas embraced by the youth counterculture in the 1960s came mainly from the post-1930s health foods movement. (One difference: the post-1960s movement endorsed vegetarianism, while the earlier movement did not.) I'd also like to disagree with those who claim that the countercultural food movement died after the 1970s. Organic/sustainable agriculture, opposition to bioengineered foods, the slow-foods movement, etc. are all in the same anti-modernist ideological tradition as both the pre-and-post-1960s health foods movement. Michael Ackerman Grad Student, Dept. of History University of Virginia |
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