Precarious Eating

Narrating Environmental Harm in the Global South

2024
Author:

Ben Jamieson Stanley

The role of food and hunger in contemporary South African and Indian environmental writing

Precarious Eating asks how recentering global South representations of food might shift understandings of environmental precarity. Taking up a diverse range of novels, films, scholar/activist writings, intellectual histories, and cookbooks, Ben Jamieson Stanley connects the ethics of eating to histories of empire and apartheid, uneven globalization, gender and sexuality, and global South experiences of climate change.

From GMOs to vegetarianism and veganism, questions of what we should (and shouldn’t) eat can be frequent sources of debate and disagreement. In Precarious Eating, Ben Jamieson Stanley asks how recentering global South representations of food might shift understandings of environmental precarity.

Precarious Eating follows the lead of writers and thinkers in South Africa and India who are tracing the production and consumption of food, exploring ways to reconnect our narratives about climate change, global capitalism, and social justice. Taking up a diverse range of novels, films, scholar/activist writings, intellectual histories, and cookbooks, Stanley connects the ethics of eating to histories of empire and apartheid, uneven globalization, gender and sexuality, and global South experiences of climate change. They shift the lens of environmental humanities from climate-focused paradigms developed in the global North to food-focused environmental culture and activism in the South, addressing topics that range from foraging and farmer suicides to disordered eating and queer intimacy.

By highlighting authors, activists, and environments of the global South, Precarious Eating joins with scholarship from postcolonial, decolonial, Indigenous, and Black studies to underscore how capitalism and empire shape our planetary environmental crisis.

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Ben Jamieson Stanley is assistant professor of English at the University of Delaware. Their work has been published in ISLE: Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment, The Global South, The Oxford Handbook of Ecocriticism Online, and the edited collections Modernism and Food Studies: Politics, Aesthetics, and the Avant-Garde and Cli-Fi and Class: Socioeconomic Justice in Contemporary American Climate Fiction.

Contents

Introduction: Narrating Precarity through Food and Hunger

Part I. Eating and Environmental Precarity in India

1. From Famine to Farmer Suicides: Precarity and Gastronomic Desire in Representations of Indian Agriculturalists

2. Nutmeg and Disordered Eating: Reframing Climate Change

Part II. Environmental Politics of Consumerism and Cuisine in South Africa

3. Hunger versus Taste: Fishing and Foraging in a Tourism Economy

4. Queer/Vegan Reading: Consumption and Complicity from Supermarket to Butcher Shop

Part III. Gastrohydropolitics and Climate Imaginaries

5. Purity and Porosity: Speculating Urban Water Justice and Future Diets

Acknowledgments

Notes

Index