Milky Appetites:让我们成为人类的食物

Athia N. Choudhury
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文跟随美国奶粉经历了多次迭代和轮回:作为国内保健食品,作为亚洲及其海外的军事化技术,以及作为全球舞台上现代健康的象征。随着人们对奶粉/脱脂牛奶消费的看法不断变化,我们可能会发现什么样的帝国关系?此外,通过筛选这段次要的历史,如何使我们能够在跨国规模下对身体主权和监督的政治进行质疑。本文认为,通过各种国家公共感知项目,鼓励了人们对乳制品的兴趣,这些项目使普通受众能够获得优生学原理,并将其作为一门体现在家庭中的科学。对奶粉/脱脂食品的军事和减肥回路的分析表明,政府机构、公司、医疗从业者、家庭经济学家和其他公共卫生工作者如何通过乳制品消费来塑造健康国家和健康公民的形象——通常以妇女、儿童和种族化的受试者为目标,通过体重管理进行改革。那些被视为不受欢迎的身体——无论是太胖还是太瘦,病得太重还是太弱——都可以通过改变食欲来修复。通过阅读20世纪中期的营养学、美国农业部档案和亚洲散居者关于乳制品生产和消费的文献,本文中的案例研究阐明了美国领导的食品素养和外援运动是如何在战时实验的支持下,通过健康技术寻求扩大美国帝国软实力的。“乳白色的胃口”提供了对国家和个人健康和健康的渴望的研究,作为帝国主义在身体上感受到的结构。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Milky Appetites: The Foods that Make Us Human
This article follows American milk powder through its many iterations and afterlives: as domestic health food, militarized technology in Asia and its diaspora, and as a symbol of modern health on a global stage. What intimacies of empire might we find by following the shifting sentiments around powdered/skimmed milk consumption? Moreover, how does sifting through this minor history allow us to interrogate the politics of body sovereignty and surveillance as it is scaled transnationally. This article argues that an appetite for dairy was encouraged through various national public sensing projects that made eugenics principles accessible for ordinary audiences as an embodied science of the home. Analyzing the military and weight-loss circuits of powdered/skim demonstrates how government agencies, corporations, medical practitioners, home economists, and other public health workers conjured images of healthy nations and abled-citizens through dairy consumption---often targeting women, children, and racialized subjects as sites of reform through weight management. Bodies that were seen as undesirable–whether too fat or too thin, too sick or too feeble–could be fixed by reforming the appetite. Reading mid-20th century dietetics, U.S. Department of Agriculture archives, and Asian diasporic literature on dairy production and consumption, the case studies in this article elucidate how U.S.-led food literacy and foreign aid campaigns, bolstered by wartime experiments, sought to expand U.S. imperial soft power through wellness technologies. “Milky Appetites” offers a study of desire for national and individual health and wellness as structures of imperialism felt on the body.
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