A "Feast of Fools": Food Security and the Carnivalesque in Peterborough, Ontario's Food Not Bombs

Authors

  • Dylan McMahon The Faculty of Environmental Studies at York University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25071/2292-4736/39893

Keywords:

food security, political critique, carnivalesque

Abstract

Counterculture movements in the 1960s and 70s dramatically reorganized the role of bodies within social frameworks and saw the internalization of political issues, both figuratively and literally. The political became the personal and quotidian moments of consumption became sites of resistance. As Warren Belasco suggests, in reference to the radical food movements that saw the expulsion of "Wonderbread" and the resurgence of home-cooked holistic foods, "[d]ietary radicalism could be lived 365 days a year, three times a day. If, as Leftists knew, the personal was political, what could be more personal than eating? And what could be more political than challenging America's largest industry, the food business?" (227). Food provides a dynamic vessel for engaging with politics and capital at both the gastronomical level (what we choose to put into our bodies) and the social level (how we arrange our bodies collectively and individually). The kneading, baking, and consumption of bread, for example, provide precious, intimate moments for expressing agency and resistance to systems of power. Belasco saw this...


Find full text in .pdf below.

Author Biography

Dylan McMahon, The Faculty of Environmental Studies at York University

Dylan McMahon is a Masters in Environmental Studies candidate at York University. His research is focused on the Ring of Fire and the historical processes that have shaped discursive topographies in northern Ontario. He is interested at interrogating how consultation discourses operate between Indigenous people and Canadian government actors by examining the historical relationships between these two parties. Dylan is also a tree-planter and a fan of esoteric poetry. He has a Bachelor of Arts in Anthropology from Trent University.

Downloads

Published

2017-06-20

How to Cite

McMahon, D. (2017). A "Feast of Fools": Food Security and the Carnivalesque in Peterborough, Ontario’s Food Not Bombs. UnderCurrents: Journal of Critical Environmental Studies, 20, 18–31. https://doi.org/10.25071/2292-4736/39893