Rewilding Food and the Self: Critical Conversations From Europe

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This volume contributes to the return to nature movement that is very much in vogue in contemporary European societies, by examining the place of food and eating in the "rewilding" process. It is divided into three parts, each of which consists of conversations between social scientists, with fieldwork collected from across Denmark, Finland, France, Italy, Norway and Switzerland. The first part focuses on the ways in which the hunter-gatherer livelihood has been transformed into a resilient, simpler and ecological way of life. It is dedicated to hunting and identifies the contexts in which large wild game meat is consumed and the reasons why such a product is still valued today. The second part shows how some practices that aim to reconnect with natural processes are developing within a market economy. Case studies on natural wine and fasting retreats help us to identify the promises that producers and promoters are relying on in order to disseminate them. Finally, the third part considers how this process of rewilding food is expressed in post-modernity. By focusing on two normative frameworks in which the rhetoric of the wild is mobilized although it is not expected to be in these terms – urbanity and the gender order – the goal is to understand the extent to which referring to the wild in food discourses and practices contributes to challenging our identities, and to creating possible forms of emancipation. This book will be of great interest to students and scholars interested in food cultures, human nature relationships, and sustainable diets.

Author(s): Tristan Fournier, Sébastien Dalgalarrondo
Series: Routledge Studies in Food, Society and the Environment
Publisher: Routledge/Earthscan
Year: 2022

Language: English
Pages: 193
City: London

Cover
Half Title
Series
Title
Copyright
Contents
List of contributors
Acknowledgments
Introduction: food, self and search for the wild
Part 1 The taste for tradition and the hunter-gatherer model
Conversation 1. Hunting and game consumption today
1 Eating wild game: a new carnivorous morality?
2 From remorse to “hunter pride”: on a study of those who eat game
Part 2 Promises and market
Conversation 2. Producing natural wines
3 “Natural” wines: the call of the wild grape
4 The wild nature of vins nature: an oeno-centered counterpoint
Conversation 3. The revival of fasting
5 The promises of fasting: between animal and primitive models
6 The self, the other and the world: the issues of today’s fasting practice
Part 3 The wild at the interstices: a route to empowerment?
Conversation 4. Rummaging within the city: Wild plants and edible rubbish
7 Foraging plants within the urban margins: on the possibilities of living with nature in the greater Paris
8 Urban scavenging: another way to rewild the self in the city
Conversation 5. Between resistance and cracks: what the process of rewilding does to the gender order
9 The wild side of man: how animal metaphors shape masculine food practices and midlife transitions
10 “Heavy food” and “being in nature”: revisiting male manual workers’ narratives on work, food and health
Conclusion: the wild in gastronomy and beyond
Index