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Feeding The Other Whiteness Privilege And Neoliberal Stigma In Food Pantries Paperback Rebecca T De Souza Robert Gottlieb

  • SKU: BELL-7436362
Feeding The Other Whiteness Privilege And Neoliberal Stigma In Food Pantries Paperback Rebecca T De Souza Robert Gottlieb
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Feeding The Other Whiteness Privilege And Neoliberal Stigma In Food Pantries Paperback Rebecca T De Souza Robert Gottlieb instant download after payment.

Publisher: The MIT Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.98 MB
Pages: 312
Author: Rebecca T de Souza; Robert Gottlieb
ISBN: 9780262536769, 0262536765
Language: English
Year: 2019
Edition: Paperback

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Feeding The Other Whiteness Privilege And Neoliberal Stigma In Food Pantries Paperback Rebecca T De Souza Robert Gottlieb by Rebecca T De Souza; Robert Gottlieb 9780262536769, 0262536765 instant download after payment.

How food pantries stigmatize their clients through a discourse that emphasizes hard work, self help, and economic productivity rather than food justice and equity.
The United States has one of the highest rates of hunger and food insecurity in the industrialized world, with poor households, single parents, and communities of color disproportionately affected. Food pantries--run by charitable and faith-based organizations--rather than legal entitlements have become a cornerstone of the government's efforts to end hunger. InFeeding the Other, Rebecca de Souza argues that food pantries stigmatize their clients through a discourse that emphasizes hard work, self help, and economic productivity rather than food justice and equity. De Souza describes this "framing, blaming, and shaming" as "neoliberal stigma" that recasts the structural issue of hunger as a problem for the individual hungry person.
De Souza shows how neoliberal stigma plays out in practice through a comparative case analysis of two food pantries in Duluth, Minnesota. Doing so, she documents the seldom-acknowledged voices, experiences, and realities of people living with hunger. She describes the failure of public institutions to protect citizens from poverty and hunger; the white privilege of pantry volunteers caught between neoliberal narratives and social justice concerns; the evangelical conviction that food assistance should be "a hand up, not a handout"; the culture of suspicion in food pantry spaces; and the constraints on food choice. It is only by rejecting the neoliberal narrative and giving voice to the hungry rather than the privileged, de Souza argues, that food pantries can become agents of food justice.

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