The Devil's Fruit: Farmworkers, Health, and Environmental Justice

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The Devil's Fruit describes the facets of the strawberry industry as a harm industry, and explores author Dvera Saxton’s activist ethnographic work with farmworkers in response to health and environmental injustices. She argues that dealing with devilish—as in deadly, depressing, disabling, and toxic—problems requires intersecting ecosocial, emotional, ethnographic, and activist labors. Through her work as an activist medical anthropologist, she found the caring labors of engaged ethnography take on many forms that go in many different directions. Through chapters that examine farmworkers’ embodiment of toxic pesticides and social and workplace relationships, Saxton critically and reflexively describes and analyzes the ways that engaged and activist ethnographic methods, frameworks, and ethics aligned and conflicted, and in various ways helped support still ongoing struggles for farmworker health and environmental justice in California. These are problems shared by other agricultural communities in the U.S. and throughout the world.
 

Author(s): Dvera I. Saxton
Series: Medical Anthropology
Publisher: Rutgers University Press
Year: 2021

Language: English
Pages: 252
City: New Brunswick

Cover
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Series Foreword by Lenore Manderson
Abbreviations
Introduction: Becoming an Engaged Activist Ethnographer
1. Engaged Anthropology with Farmworkers: Building Rapport, Busting Myths
2. Strawberries: An (Un)natural History
3. Pesticides and Farmworker Health: Toxic Layers, Invisible Harm
4. Accompanying Farmworkers
5. Ecosocial Solidarities: Teachers, Students, and Farmworker Families
Conclusion: Activist Anthropology as Triage
Acknowledgments
Notes
References
Index
About the Author