Eating Potatoes Is Patriotic: State, Market, and the Common Good in Contemporary China
The article explores recent materials, including cookbooks and a television documentary, backed by the state to promote the potato as a Chinese staple food. These materials attempt to convince would-be eaters that the tuber is a highly nutritious food, suited to modern lifestyles and health concerns...
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2019-12-01
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Series: | Journal of Current Chinese Affairs |
Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1177/1868102620907239 |
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doaj-906177b6bd84489dbae66e47edbf0f192020-11-25T03:37:08ZengSAGE PublishingJournal of Current Chinese Affairs1868-10261868-48742019-12-014810.1177/1868102620907239Eating Potatoes Is Patriotic: State, Market, and the Common Good in Contemporary ChinaJakob Klein0 Department of Anthropology and Sociology, SOAS University of London, UKThe article explores recent materials, including cookbooks and a television documentary, backed by the state to promote the potato as a Chinese staple food. These materials attempt to convince would-be eaters that the tuber is a highly nutritious food, suited to modern lifestyles and health concerns, and that it is both cosmopolitan and embedded in Chinese regional food traditions. They articulate a moral economy of food in which the market is a key mechanism for achieving the greater good of national grain security and a healthy population, and in which state and citizen are jointly responsible for “nourishing the people.” Consumers are encouraged to purchase potatoes and potato foods not only to cultivate their own health, but also out of a duty to the well-being of the country. In framing potato-eating as a patriotic act, potato campaigns chime with emerging practices in China of “ethical food consumption.”https://doi.org/10.1177/1868102620907239 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Jakob Klein |
spellingShingle |
Jakob Klein Eating Potatoes Is Patriotic: State, Market, and the Common Good in Contemporary China Journal of Current Chinese Affairs |
author_facet |
Jakob Klein |
author_sort |
Jakob Klein |
title |
Eating Potatoes Is Patriotic: State, Market, and the Common Good in Contemporary China |
title_short |
Eating Potatoes Is Patriotic: State, Market, and the Common Good in Contemporary China |
title_full |
Eating Potatoes Is Patriotic: State, Market, and the Common Good in Contemporary China |
title_fullStr |
Eating Potatoes Is Patriotic: State, Market, and the Common Good in Contemporary China |
title_full_unstemmed |
Eating Potatoes Is Patriotic: State, Market, and the Common Good in Contemporary China |
title_sort |
eating potatoes is patriotic: state, market, and the common good in contemporary china |
publisher |
SAGE Publishing |
series |
Journal of Current Chinese Affairs |
issn |
1868-1026 1868-4874 |
publishDate |
2019-12-01 |
description |
The article explores recent materials, including cookbooks and a television documentary, backed by the state to promote the potato as a Chinese staple food. These materials attempt to convince would-be eaters that the tuber is a highly nutritious food, suited to modern lifestyles and health concerns, and that it is both cosmopolitan and embedded in Chinese regional food traditions. They articulate a moral economy of food in which the market is a key mechanism for achieving the greater good of national grain security and a healthy population, and in which state and citizen are jointly responsible for “nourishing the people.” Consumers are encouraged to purchase potatoes and potato foods not only to cultivate their own health, but also out of a duty to the well-being of the country. In framing potato-eating as a patriotic act, potato campaigns chime with emerging practices in China of “ethical food consumption.” |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1177/1868102620907239 |
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