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Whose Hunger?: Concepts of Famine and Practices of Aid - Barrows Lectures Volume 17 | Academic Research on Global Hunger Crisis | Perfect for Humanitarian Studies and Sociology Courses
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Whose Hunger?: Concepts of Famine and Practices of Aid - Barrows Lectures Volume 17 | Academic Research on Global Hunger Crisis | Perfect for Humanitarian Studies and Sociology Courses
Whose Hunger?: Concepts of Famine and Practices of Aid - Barrows Lectures Volume 17 | Academic Research on Global Hunger Crisis | Perfect for Humanitarian Studies and Sociology Courses
Whose Hunger?: Concepts of Famine and Practices of Aid - Barrows Lectures Volume 17 | Academic Research on Global Hunger Crisis | Perfect for Humanitarian Studies and Sociology Courses
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Description
An analytical look at the ways we define and respond to famine. We see famine and look for the likely causes: poor food distribution, unstable regimes, caprices of weather. A technical problem, we tell ourselves, one that modern social and natural science will someday resolve. Jenny Edkins responds to the contrary: famine in the contemporary world is not the antithesis of modernity but its symptom. A critical investigation of hunger, famine, and aid practices in international politics, Whose Hunger? shows how modernity frames our understanding of famine—and, consequently, shapes our responses. Edkins examines Malthus and the origins of famine theory in notions of scarcity. Drawing on the work of Lacan, de Waal, Foucault, Zizek, and particularly Derrida, she considers Amartya Sen’s entitlement approach, the Band Aid/Live Aid events, and food for work projects in Eritrea as examples of the technologization and repoliticization of famine. From the politics of famine to the practices of aid, from the theories of modernity to the complex emergencies of modern life, from the broad view to the telling detail, this searching book takes us closer to a clear understanding of some of the worst ravages of our time.
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5
The thesis of this book is fascinating in that it forces you to rethink everything the we take for granted in this modern age regarding hunger, famine, agriculture and food. Drawing on Foucault, Mathus, de Waal, and many other intellectuals, thinkers, and writers, Edkins creates a compelling and well-explained argument about famine and about the global food regime in general. If you are at all interested in development, aid, hunger, the third world, famine, or the modern episteme, read this book!

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