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Politics of the Pantry: Housewives, Food, and Consumer Protest in Twentieth-Century America

✍ Scribed by Emily E.L.B. Twarog


Publisher
Oxford University Press, USA
Year
2017
Tongue
English
Leaves
209
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


The history of women's political involvement has focused heavily on electoral politics, but throughout the twentieth century women engaged in grassroots activism when they found it increasingly challenging to feed their families and balance their household ledgers. Politics of the Pantry examines how working- and middle-class American housewives used their identity as housewives to protest the high cost of food. In doing so, housewives' relationships with the state evolved over the course of the century. Shifting the focus away from the workplace as a site of protest, Emily E. LB. Twarog looks to the homefront as a starting point for protest in the public sphere.

With a focus on food consumption rather than production, Twarog looks closely at the ways food--specifically meat--was used by women as a political tool. Engaging in domestic politics, housewives both challenged and embraced the social and economic order as they sought to craft a unique political voice and build a consumer movement focused on the home.

The book examines key moments when women used consumer actions to embrace their socially ascribed roles as housewives to demand economic stability for their families and communities. These include the Depression-era meat boycott of 1935, the consumer coalitions of the New Deal, and the wave of consumer protests between 1966 and 1973. Twarog introduces numerous labor and consumer activists and their organizations in both urban and suburban areas--Detroit, greater Chicago, Long Island, and Los Angeles.

✦ Table of Contents


Cover
Politics of the Pantry
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Introduction
1. The 1935 Meat Boycott and the Evolution of Domestic Politics
2. “Women—​The Guardians of Price Control”: Working-​Class Housewives, Consumer Activism, and the State
3. “Without Any Suspicion of . . . Communism”: Domestic Politics during the Cold War
4. “What Do Housewives Do All Day?”: The Suburbanization of Meat Boycotts and Supermarket Protests
5. Organizing in the 1970s: The Rise and Fall of Domestic Politics
Epilogue “What We Want Is Food”: Food Policy and Protests in the Twenty-​first Century
Notes
Bibliography
Index


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