Page de couverture de Gardening at the Margins

Gardening at the Margins

Convivial Labor, Community, and Resistance

Aperçu

30 jours d'essai gratuit à Audible Standard

Essayez l’abonnement standard gratuitement
Choisissez 1 livre audio par mois dans notre collection contenant plus de 900 000 titres.
Écoutez les livres audio que vous avez sélectionnés tant que vous êtes membre.
Profitez d’un accès illimité à des balados incontournables.
L'abonnement Standard se renouvelle automatiquement au tarif de 8,99 $/mois + taxes applicables après 30 jours. Annulation possible à tout moment.

Gardening at the Margins

Auteur(s): Gabriel R. Valle
Narrateur(s): Lee Osorio
Essayez l’abonnement standard gratuitement

8,99 $/mois après 30 jours. Annulable en tout temps

Acheter pour 20,82 $

Acheter pour 20,82 $

À propos de cet audio

Gardening at the Margins tells the remarkable story of a diverse group of neighbors working together to grow food and community in the Santa Clara Valley in California. Based on four years of deeply engaged ethnographic field research via a Participatory Action Research project with the people and ecosystems of La Mesa Verde home garden program, Gabriel R. Valle develops a theory of convivial labor to describe how the acts of care among the diverse gardeners—through growing, preparing, and eating food in one of the most income unequal places in the country—are powerful, complex acts of resistance.

The individuals featured in the book are imagining and building alternative worlds and futures amid the very real challenges they embody and endure. Climate change, for example, is forcing thousands of migrants to urban areas, which means recent immigrants' traditional environmental, nutritional, and healing knowledge will continue to be threatened by the pervasiveness of modernity and the homogenization of global capitalism. Moreover, once rural people migrate to urban areas, their ability to retain traditional foodways will remain difficult without spaces of autonomy. The stories in this book reveal how people create the physical space to grow food and the political space to enact autonomy to revive and restore agroecological knowledge needed for an uncertain future.

©2022 The Arizona Board of Regents (P)2023 Tantor
Amérique latine Amériques Sciences sociales Sociologie Capitalisme Jardinage Socialisme Écosystème
Pas encore de commentaire