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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Bryan L. McDonald (Assistant Professor of History, Assistant Professor of History, Pennsylvania State University)Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc Imprint: Oxford University Press Inc Dimensions: Width: 16.30cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 23.60cm Weight: 0.499kg ISBN: 9780190600686ISBN 10: 0190600683 Pages: 264 Publication Date: 29 December 2016 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsAcknowledgments Introduction: Food Power, the Food Network, and American Security Chapter 1: Freedom from Want: Creating a Postwar Food System Chapter 2: Fixed Stomachs and Convenience Foods: Abundance and Food in the 1950s Chapter 3: Freedom to Farm: Prosperity, Security, and the Farm Problem in the 1950s Chapter 4: What to Eat After an Atomic Bomb: Deploying Food Power Defensively Chapter 5: Food for Peace and the War on Hunger: Food Power in the 1960s Chapter 6: The World Food Crisis and the End of the Postwar Food System Conclusion: The Past, Present, and Future of World Food Problems Notes IndexReviewsFood Power: The Rise and Fall of the Postwar American Food System takes this superfluity of food as its central concern, tracking the political dynamic by which surplus food was either a problem to be eliminated or a boon to international diplomatic strategies....It is a fascinating story that brings together a number of historical strands, including the effect of science and technology on both farming and food production, the role of World War II in creating an unprecedented food system, the challenges of electoral politics, and the various kinds of political philosophy and strategies that different secretaries of agriculture followed in wrestling with these problems....McDonald's book is important and accessible, and it sheds new light on the challenges governments face in balancing production, consumption, and political survival. --Deborah Fitzgerald, American Historical Review McDonald investigates how the US used surplus food to create an expansive global food system during the 25 years following World War II. Through historical and textual analyses, the author teases out the complex social, economic, and political forces impacting how the US used food to promote American values and agendas, both domestically and around the world....Ultimately, McDonald describes a transition from this postwar food system to the current food network, calling for a greater global focus on building food reserves. This book could be used in the disciplines of history, sociology, political science, business, and dietetics...Recommended. --CHOICE In this compact and accessible book, McDonald illuminates the policies and politics, both domestic and international, of American food. From the postwar food crises of the 1940s to the African famines of the early 1970s, the US caloric cornucopia provided Washington with super-sized leverage in foreign policy. McDonald deftly explains when and how the United States chose to deploy its unparalleled (and unsustained) food power. --J.R. McNeill, Georgetown University This brisk account of food and power reveals how US policymakers came to treat food as a strategic resource in the aftermath of World War II. McDonald has provided the critical backstory to current concerns about food security. --Kristin Hoganson, author of Consumers' Imperium In this thoughtful and well-researched book, Bryan McDonald considers the rise of a global food network from the long neglected perspectives of diplomacy and food security. His work is judiciously balanced but hardly hesitant to make convincing if controversial arguments that force us to rethink the emergence of Big Agriculture, as well as the alternative farming techniques that have come to challenge Big Food's defining premises. McDonald successfully opens the door for a counter-narrative that takes the edge off old-fashioned economic greed as the primary cause of our 'broken food system' and forces us to think more creatively, and historically, about what we eat. --James McWilliams, author of Just Food McDonald investigates how the US used surplus food to create an expansive global food system during the 25 years following World War II. Through historical and textual analyses, the author teases out the complex social, economic, and political forces impacting how the US used food to promote American values and agendas, both domestically and around the world....Ultimately, McDonald describes a transition from this postwar food system to the current food network, calling for a greater global focus on building food reserves. This book could be used in the disciplines of history, sociology, political science, business, and dietetics...Recommended. --CHOICE In this compact and accessible book, McDonald illuminates the policies and politics, both domestic and international, of American food. From the postwar food crises of the 1940s to the African famines of the early 1970s, the US caloric cornucopia provided Washington with super-sized leverage in foreign policy. McDonald deftly explains when and how the United States chose to deploy its unparalleled (and unsustained) food power. --J.R. McNeill, Georgetown University This brisk account of food and power reveals how US policymakers came to treat food as a strategic resource in the aftermath of World War II. McDonald has provided the critical backstory to current concerns about food security. --Kristin Hoganson, author of Consumers' Imperium In this thoughtful and well-researched book, Bryan McDonald considers the rise of a global food network from the long neglected perspectives of diplomacy and food security. His work is judiciously balanced but hardly hesitant to make convincing if controversial arguments that force us to rethink the emergence of Big Agriculture, as well as the alternative farming techniques that have come to challenge Big Food's defining premises. McDonald successfully opens the door for a counter-narrative that takes the edge off old-fashioned economic greed as the primary cause of our 'broken food system' and forces us to think more creatively, and historically, about what we eat. --James McWilliams, author of Just Food In this compact and accessible book, McDonald illuminates the policies and politics, both domestic and international, of American food. From the postwar food crises of the 1940s to the African famines of the early 1970s, the US caloric cornucopia provided Washington with super-sized leverage in foreign policy. McDonald deftly explains when and how the United States chose to deploy its unparalleled (and unsustained) food power. --J.R. McNeill, Georgetown University This brisk account of food and power reveals how US policymakers came to treat food as a strategic resource in the aftermath of World War II. McDonald has provided the critical backstory to current concerns about food security. --Kristin Hoganson, author of Consumers' Imperium In this thoughtful and well-researched book, Bryan McDonald considers the rise of a global food network from the long neglected perspectives of diplomacy and food security. His work is judiciously balanced but hardly hesitant to make convincing if controversial arguments that force us to rethink the emergence of Big Agriculture, as well as the alternative farming techniques that have come to challenge Big Food's defining premises. McDonald successfully opens the door for a counter-narrative that takes the edge off old-fashioned economic greed as the primary cause of our 'broken food system' and forces us to think more creatively, and historically, about what we eat. --James McWilliams, author of Just Food In this compact and accessible book, McDonald illuminates the policies and politics, both domestic and international, of American food. From the postwar food crises of the 1940s to the African famines of the early 1970s, the US caloric cornucopia provided Washington with super-sized leverage in foreign policy. McDonald deftly explains when and how the United States chose to deploy its unparalleled (and unsustained) food power. -- J.R. McNeill, Georgetown University This brisk account of food and power reveals how US policymakers came to treat food as a strategic resource in the aftermath of World War II. McDonald has provided the critical backstory to current concerns about food security. -Kristin Hoganson, author of <em>Consumers' Imperium</em> In this thoughtful and well-researched book, Bryan McDonald considers the rise of a global food network from the long neglected perspectives of diplomacy and food security. His work is judiciously balanced but hardly hesitant to make convincing if controversial arguments that force us to rethink the emergence of Big Agriculture, as well as the alternative farming techniques that have come to challenge Big Food's defining premises. McDonald successfully opens the door for a counter-narrative that takes the edge off old-fashioned economic greed as the primary cause of our 'broken food system' and forces us to think more creatively, and historically, about what we eat. --James McWilliams, author of <em>Just Food</em> Author InformationBryan McDonald is Assistant Professor of History at Pennsylvania State University. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |