Community Food Work as Critical Practice: A Faith-based Perspective

Historically, many faith-based hunger relief efforts address food insecurity through the emergency food system, but they often do not challenge the systemic causes of the need, which according to some, are poverty and inequality. As a promising alternative, community food work is a radical approach...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Landis, Rebecca Danielle
Other Authors: Agricultural and Extension Education
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/56581
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-565812021-02-16T05:34:26Z Community Food Work as Critical Practice: A Faith-based Perspective Landis, Rebecca Danielle Agricultural and Extension Education Niewolny, Kimberly L. Clark, Susan F. Archibald, Thomas G. community food work faith-based organization narrative inquiry critically reflective practitioner praxis Historically, many faith-based hunger relief efforts address food insecurity through the emergency food system, but they often do not challenge the systemic causes of the need, which according to some, are poverty and inequality. As a promising alternative, community food work is a radical approach to food system change that imbues values of justice, sustainability, and equity into the food system to reduce the pervasiveness of poverty and inequality in society. I used narrative inquiry as methodology in a faith-based context to explore the role of criticality in community food work. Additionally, I explored the treatment of hegemony in these practitioners' critically reflective practice. I engaged six practitioners in narrative-based interviews and subsequently asked them to read and analyze their own interview. I then gathered all participants for a collective reflection session where we reflected on excerpts from the interviews and used them as a foundation for further dialogue and reflection. Each practitioner used their faith to varying degrees in the performance of their work. I found significant notions of feeling called to serve, and bringing God's kingdom to earth, but an avoidance to use this work to evangelize. The narratives reflected community food work as a community development effort and extended beyond the context of food. Affirming, trusting relationships serve as a foundation to how this group of practitioners approach their work, and provide the space to interact with their work in radical ways and raise critical consciousness. Master of Science in Life Sciences 2015-09-18T20:05:31Z 2015-09-18T20:05:31Z 2015-08-31 Thesis vt_gsexam:6186 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/56581 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic community food work
faith-based organization
narrative inquiry
critically reflective practitioner
praxis
spellingShingle community food work
faith-based organization
narrative inquiry
critically reflective practitioner
praxis
Landis, Rebecca Danielle
Community Food Work as Critical Practice: A Faith-based Perspective
description Historically, many faith-based hunger relief efforts address food insecurity through the emergency food system, but they often do not challenge the systemic causes of the need, which according to some, are poverty and inequality. As a promising alternative, community food work is a radical approach to food system change that imbues values of justice, sustainability, and equity into the food system to reduce the pervasiveness of poverty and inequality in society. I used narrative inquiry as methodology in a faith-based context to explore the role of criticality in community food work. Additionally, I explored the treatment of hegemony in these practitioners' critically reflective practice. I engaged six practitioners in narrative-based interviews and subsequently asked them to read and analyze their own interview. I then gathered all participants for a collective reflection session where we reflected on excerpts from the interviews and used them as a foundation for further dialogue and reflection. Each practitioner used their faith to varying degrees in the performance of their work. I found significant notions of feeling called to serve, and bringing God's kingdom to earth, but an avoidance to use this work to evangelize. The narratives reflected community food work as a community development effort and extended beyond the context of food. Affirming, trusting relationships serve as a foundation to how this group of practitioners approach their work, and provide the space to interact with their work in radical ways and raise critical consciousness. === Master of Science in Life Sciences
author2 Agricultural and Extension Education
author_facet Agricultural and Extension Education
Landis, Rebecca Danielle
author Landis, Rebecca Danielle
author_sort Landis, Rebecca Danielle
title Community Food Work as Critical Practice: A Faith-based Perspective
title_short Community Food Work as Critical Practice: A Faith-based Perspective
title_full Community Food Work as Critical Practice: A Faith-based Perspective
title_fullStr Community Food Work as Critical Practice: A Faith-based Perspective
title_full_unstemmed Community Food Work as Critical Practice: A Faith-based Perspective
title_sort community food work as critical practice: a faith-based perspective
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/56581
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