On - Farm Apprenticeships: Labor Identities and Sociocultural Reproduction within Alternative Agrifood Movements

On-farm apprenticeships are gaining momentum as an important strategy for beginning farmer training. They are also a space for identity work and rehearsal of alternative agrifood movement practice (AAMs; MacAuley and Niewolny, 2016; Pilgeram, 2011). AAMs embody and recursively construct values of bi...

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Main Author: MacAuley, Lorien Eleanora
Other Authors: Agricultural and Extension Education
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/80966
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-809662021-02-16T05:34:21Z On - Farm Apprenticeships: Labor Identities and Sociocultural Reproduction within Alternative Agrifood Movements MacAuley, Lorien Eleanora Agricultural and Extension Education Niewolny, Kimberly L. Harrison, Anthony Kwame Archibald, Thomas G. Stephenson, Max O. Jr. Beginning Farmer Apprenticeship Farmworker Farm Labor Social Justice On-farm apprenticeships are gaining momentum as an important strategy for beginning farmer training. They are also a space for identity work and rehearsal of alternative agrifood movement practice (AAMs; MacAuley and Niewolny, 2016; Pilgeram, 2011). AAMs embody and recursively construct values of biophysical sustainability, food quality, egalitarianism, and agrarianism (Constance, Renard, and Rivera-Ferre; 2014). However, AAMs have been critiqued for disproportionately representing upper- to middle-class white cultural norms (Allen, 2004; Guthman, 2008a; Slocum, 2007), for romanticized agrarian ideology (Carlisle, 2013), and for mechanisms reproductive of neoliberalism, which buttresses the dominant agrifood system (Guthman, 2008b). These AAM discourse elements are expressed in on-farm apprenticeships. On-farm apprenticeships are variably understood as beginning farmer training (Hamilton, 2011), as inexpensive farm labor (MacAuley and Niewolny, 2016; Pilgeram, 2011), and as sites of tension between economic and non-economic attributes (Ekers, Levkoe, Walker, and Dale, 2016). I illuminate these dynamics within on-farm apprenticeships through the complementary theoretical lenses of cultural historical activity theory (Engeström, 1999), cognitive praxis (Eyerman and Jamison, 1991), and cultural identity theory (Hall, 1996). I employ critical ethnographic case study methodology to explore issues of power, social reproduction, and equity. I conducted 53 days of participant observation, worked alongside 19 apprentices on six farms for 37 days, conducted interviews (n=25), and completed a document analysis (n=407). I observed white spaces and class-based work values re/produced, mediated by AAM discourse. Furthermore, I observed three distinct objectives within the activity system: beginning farmer training, inexpensive labor for farms, and an authentic farm lifestyle experience. In contrast to the first two, this third objective, the authentic lifestyle, resists market-based logics. Instead, logics that did govern behavior include membership in a movement; an ascetic bent; the valorization of farmers and the authentic farm lifestyle; alignment with clean, healthy, and dirty parts of the job; and communitarianism. These logics point towards the creation of a third type of nonmarket/quasimarket space (Gibson-Graham, Cameron, and Healy, 2013). I describe several considerations for on-farm apprenticeship to lead to greater equity, reproduction of viable small farm labor models, and stabilized and legitimate nonmarket understandings of what makes on-farm apprenticeship function. Ph. D. 2017-12-05T09:00:40Z 2017-12-05T09:00:40Z 2017-12-04 Dissertation vt_gsexam:13238 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/80966 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Beginning Farmer
Apprenticeship
Farmworker
Farm Labor
Social Justice
spellingShingle Beginning Farmer
Apprenticeship
Farmworker
Farm Labor
Social Justice
MacAuley, Lorien Eleanora
On - Farm Apprenticeships: Labor Identities and Sociocultural Reproduction within Alternative Agrifood Movements
description On-farm apprenticeships are gaining momentum as an important strategy for beginning farmer training. They are also a space for identity work and rehearsal of alternative agrifood movement practice (AAMs; MacAuley and Niewolny, 2016; Pilgeram, 2011). AAMs embody and recursively construct values of biophysical sustainability, food quality, egalitarianism, and agrarianism (Constance, Renard, and Rivera-Ferre; 2014). However, AAMs have been critiqued for disproportionately representing upper- to middle-class white cultural norms (Allen, 2004; Guthman, 2008a; Slocum, 2007), for romanticized agrarian ideology (Carlisle, 2013), and for mechanisms reproductive of neoliberalism, which buttresses the dominant agrifood system (Guthman, 2008b). These AAM discourse elements are expressed in on-farm apprenticeships. On-farm apprenticeships are variably understood as beginning farmer training (Hamilton, 2011), as inexpensive farm labor (MacAuley and Niewolny, 2016; Pilgeram, 2011), and as sites of tension between economic and non-economic attributes (Ekers, Levkoe, Walker, and Dale, 2016). I illuminate these dynamics within on-farm apprenticeships through the complementary theoretical lenses of cultural historical activity theory (Engeström, 1999), cognitive praxis (Eyerman and Jamison, 1991), and cultural identity theory (Hall, 1996). I employ critical ethnographic case study methodology to explore issues of power, social reproduction, and equity. I conducted 53 days of participant observation, worked alongside 19 apprentices on six farms for 37 days, conducted interviews (n=25), and completed a document analysis (n=407). I observed white spaces and class-based work values re/produced, mediated by AAM discourse. Furthermore, I observed three distinct objectives within the activity system: beginning farmer training, inexpensive labor for farms, and an authentic farm lifestyle experience. In contrast to the first two, this third objective, the authentic lifestyle, resists market-based logics. Instead, logics that did govern behavior include membership in a movement; an ascetic bent; the valorization of farmers and the authentic farm lifestyle; alignment with clean, healthy, and dirty parts of the job; and communitarianism. These logics point towards the creation of a third type of nonmarket/quasimarket space (Gibson-Graham, Cameron, and Healy, 2013). I describe several considerations for on-farm apprenticeship to lead to greater equity, reproduction of viable small farm labor models, and stabilized and legitimate nonmarket understandings of what makes on-farm apprenticeship function. === Ph. D.
author2 Agricultural and Extension Education
author_facet Agricultural and Extension Education
MacAuley, Lorien Eleanora
author MacAuley, Lorien Eleanora
author_sort MacAuley, Lorien Eleanora
title On - Farm Apprenticeships: Labor Identities and Sociocultural Reproduction within Alternative Agrifood Movements
title_short On - Farm Apprenticeships: Labor Identities and Sociocultural Reproduction within Alternative Agrifood Movements
title_full On - Farm Apprenticeships: Labor Identities and Sociocultural Reproduction within Alternative Agrifood Movements
title_fullStr On - Farm Apprenticeships: Labor Identities and Sociocultural Reproduction within Alternative Agrifood Movements
title_full_unstemmed On - Farm Apprenticeships: Labor Identities and Sociocultural Reproduction within Alternative Agrifood Movements
title_sort on - farm apprenticeships: labor identities and sociocultural reproduction within alternative agrifood movements
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/80966
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