American Manna: Religious Responses to the American Industrial Food System
<p>“American Manna: Religious Responses to the American Industrial Food System” is an investigation of the religious complexity present in religious food reform movements. I conducted ethnographic fieldwork at four field sites. These field sites are a Jewish organic vegetable farm where the fa...
Main Author: | |
---|---|
Other Authors: | |
Published: |
2016
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/10161/12203 |
id |
ndltd-DUKE-oai-dukespace.lib.duke.edu-10161-12203 |
---|---|
record_format |
oai_dc |
spelling |
ndltd-DUKE-oai-dukespace.lib.duke.edu-10161-122032016-06-08T03:30:26ZAmerican Manna: Religious Responses to the American Industrial Food SystemKrone, Adrienne MichelleReligionAmerican studiesJudaic studiesAgricultureAnimal StudiesChristianityEcologyFood StudiesJudaism<p>“American Manna: Religious Responses to the American Industrial Food System” is an investigation of the religious complexity present in religious food reform movements. I conducted ethnographic fieldwork at four field sites. These field sites are a Jewish organic vegetable farm where the farmers begin their days with meditation, a Christian raw vegan diet center run by Messianic Jews, a Christian family that raises their cattle on pastures and sends them to a halal processing plant for slaughter, and a Jewish farm where Christian and Buddhist farm staff helped to implement shmita, the biblical agricultural sabbatical year. </p><p>The religious people of America do not exist in neatly bound silos, so in my research I move with the religious people to the spaces that are less clearly defined as “Christian” or “Jewish.” I study religious food reformers within the framework of what I have termed “free-range religion” because they organize in groups outside the traditional religious organizational structures. My argument regarding free-range religion has three parts. I show that (1) perceived injustices within the American industrial food system have motivated some religious people to take action; (2) that when they do, they direct their efforts against the American food industry, and tend to do so outside traditional religious institutions; and finally, (3) in creating alternatives to the American food industry, religious people engage in inter-religious and extra-religious activism. </p><p>Chapter 1 serves as the introduction, literature review, and methodology overview. Chapter 2 focuses on the food-centered Judaism at the Adamah Environmental Fellowship at the Isabella Freedman Jewish Retreat Center in Falls Village, CT. In Chapter 3, I discuss the Hallelujah Diet as prescriptive literature and as it is put into practice at the Hallelujah Diet Retreat Center in Lake Lure, NC. Chapter 4 follows cows as they move from the grassy hills of Baldwin Family Farms in Yanceyville, NC to the meat counter at Whole Foods Markets. In Chapter 5, I consider the shmita year, the biblical agricultural sabbatical practice that was reimagined and implemented at Pearlstone Center in Baltimore, MD during 2014-2015. Chapter 6 will conclude this dissertation with a discussion of where religious food reform has been, where it is now, and a glimpse of what the future holds.</p>DissertationMorgan, David2016Dissertationhttp://hdl.handle.net/10161/12203 |
collection |
NDLTD |
sources |
NDLTD |
topic |
Religion American studies Judaic studies Agriculture Animal Studies Christianity Ecology Food Studies Judaism |
spellingShingle |
Religion American studies Judaic studies Agriculture Animal Studies Christianity Ecology Food Studies Judaism Krone, Adrienne Michelle American Manna: Religious Responses to the American Industrial Food System |
description |
<p>“American Manna: Religious Responses to the American Industrial Food System” is an investigation of the religious complexity present in religious food reform movements. I conducted ethnographic fieldwork at four field sites. These field sites are a Jewish organic vegetable farm where the farmers begin their days with meditation, a Christian raw vegan diet center run by Messianic Jews, a Christian family that raises their cattle on pastures and sends them to a halal processing plant for slaughter, and a Jewish farm where Christian and Buddhist farm staff helped to implement shmita, the biblical agricultural sabbatical year. </p><p>The religious people of America do not exist in neatly bound silos, so in my research I move with the religious people to the spaces that are less clearly defined as “Christian” or “Jewish.” I study religious food reformers within the framework of what I have termed “free-range religion” because they organize in groups outside the traditional religious organizational structures. My argument regarding free-range religion has three parts. I show that (1) perceived injustices within the American industrial food system have motivated some religious people to take action; (2) that when they do, they direct their efforts against the American food industry, and tend to do so outside traditional religious institutions; and finally, (3) in creating alternatives to the American food industry, religious people engage in inter-religious and extra-religious activism. </p><p>Chapter 1 serves as the introduction, literature review, and methodology overview. Chapter 2 focuses on the food-centered Judaism at the Adamah Environmental Fellowship at the Isabella Freedman Jewish Retreat Center in Falls Village, CT. In Chapter 3, I discuss the Hallelujah Diet as prescriptive literature and as it is put into practice at the Hallelujah Diet Retreat Center in Lake Lure, NC. Chapter 4 follows cows as they move from the grassy hills of Baldwin Family Farms in Yanceyville, NC to the meat counter at Whole Foods Markets. In Chapter 5, I consider the shmita year, the biblical agricultural sabbatical practice that was reimagined and implemented at Pearlstone Center in Baltimore, MD during 2014-2015. Chapter 6 will conclude this dissertation with a discussion of where religious food reform has been, where it is now, and a glimpse of what the future holds.</p> === Dissertation |
author2 |
Morgan, David |
author_facet |
Morgan, David Krone, Adrienne Michelle |
author |
Krone, Adrienne Michelle |
author_sort |
Krone, Adrienne Michelle |
title |
American Manna: Religious Responses to the American Industrial Food System |
title_short |
American Manna: Religious Responses to the American Industrial Food System |
title_full |
American Manna: Religious Responses to the American Industrial Food System |
title_fullStr |
American Manna: Religious Responses to the American Industrial Food System |
title_full_unstemmed |
American Manna: Religious Responses to the American Industrial Food System |
title_sort |
american manna: religious responses to the american industrial food system |
publishDate |
2016 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10161/12203 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT kroneadriennemichelle americanmannareligiousresponsestotheamericanindustrialfoodsystem |
_version_ |
1718296590477688832 |