The Past in the Present: What our Ancestors Taught us about Surviving Pandemics.

Food ethics Pub Date : 2021-01-01 Epub Date: 2021-04-17 DOI:10.1007/s41055-021-00088-7
Gabriel R Valle
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Amidst the recent threat of COVID-19, home gardens have surged in popularity as seed companies and nurseries find it challenging to keep their supplies fully stocked. The victory garden movement that emerged during WWII has today re-emerged as COVID victory gardens. Yet, the global changes and cognitive shifts associated with COVID-19 have differential impacts. The narrative of COVID victory gardens depoliticizes urban agriculture. It is blind to its long history in marginalized, oppressed, and displaced communities where home gardens have always been part of a struggle for identity, autonomy, and self- and communal-determination. I argue the blindness embedded in the narrative of COVID victory gardens violates our "food-related obligations," which are our responsibilities to ourselves, our food, and each other. Silencing how communities of color have historically grown food in pursuit of dignity disregards how home gardens in communities of color are not merely a reactionary response to crisis but part of a historical legacy whereby people of color have grown food for generations to create and recreate sustainable ways of living that validate their cultures, knowledges, and ways of being.

从过去到现在:我们的祖先教给我们如何在大流行病中生存。
在最近的COVID-19威胁中,家庭花园的受欢迎程度飙升,因为种子公司和苗圃发现很难保持充足的供应。二战期间出现的胜利花园运动今天再次出现为COVID胜利花园。然而,与COVID-19相关的全球变化和认知转变产生了不同的影响。COVID胜利花园的叙述使城市农业非政治化。在被边缘化、受压迫和流离失所的社区中,家庭花园一直是争取身份、自治、自我和公共决心的斗争的一部分,它对自己的悠久历史视而不见。我认为,COVID胜利花园叙事中的盲目性违反了我们的“与食物有关的义务”,这是我们对自己、食物和彼此的责任。对有色人种社区在历史上种植食物以追求尊严的做法予以沉默,忽视了有色人种社区的家庭菜园不仅是对危机的反动反应,而且是有色人种世世代代种植食物的历史遗产的一部分,以创造和重建可持续的生活方式,以验证他们的文化、知识和生存方式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
3.20
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