Ruin Their Crops on the Ground, Andrea Freeman
Ruin Their Crops on the Ground, Andrea Freeman
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Ruin Their Crops on the Ground
The Politics of Food in the United States, from the Trail of Tears to School Lunch

Author: Andrea Freeman

Narrator: Heni Zoutomou

Unabridged: 7 hr 28 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 07/16/2024


Synopsis

The first and definitive history of the use of food in United States law and politics as a weapon of conquest and control, a Fast Food Nation for the Black Lives Matter era

In 1779, to subjugate Indigenous nations, George Washington ordered his troops to “ruin their crops now in the ground and prevent their planting more.” Destroying harvests is just one way that the United States has used food as a political tool. Trying to prevent enslaved people from rising up, enslavers restricted their consumption, providing only enough to fuel labor. Since the Great Depression, school lunches have served as dumping grounds for unwanted agricultural surpluses.

From frybread to government cheese, Ruin Their Crops on the Ground draws on over fifteen years of research to argue that U.S. food law and policy have created and maintained racial and social inequality. In an epic, sweeping account, Andrea Freeman, who pioneered the term “food oppression,” moves from colonization to slavery to the Americanization of immigrant food culture, to the commodities supplied to Native reservations, to milk as a symbol of white supremacy. She traces the long-standing alliance between the government and food industries that have produced gaping racial health disparities, and she shows how these practices continue to this day, through the marketing of unhealthy goods that target marginalized communities, causing diabetes, high blood pressure, and premature death.

Ruin Their Crops on the Ground is a groundbreaking addition to the history and politics of food. It will permanently upend the notion that we freely and equally choose what we put on our plates.

About The Author

Andrea Freeman, a pioneer in the field of food politics, is a professor at Southwestern Law School. A Fulbright scholar and author of Skimmed: Breastfeeding, Race, and Injustice, Freeman has published and appeared in the Washington Post, Salon, The Takeaway, Here & Now, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Black Agenda Report, and more. She lives in Los Angeles.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Moonkiszt on November 06, 2024

When a book triggers new thoughts and new information that I keep going back to in my post-read days. . .it gets all the stars. This is a non-fiction yell for someone out there to Pay Attention! Something Over Here is Broken and Needs to Be Fixed! Well, I'm listening and pondering, and thinking diff......more

Goodreads review by Janalyn, the blind reviewer on June 27, 2024

Ruin Their Crops On The Ground by Andrea Freeman in the book the author mostly relies on sentiment, ignorance and preference as opposed to fax in hard data. In the first chapter she uses the whole debacle with round up and farmers getting a grant to say they did this so lesser income families couldn......more

Goodreads review by Madi on September 09, 2024

There were some interesting and informational points about corporate control of food policy and how food and racism intersect. However, the writing, especially in the second half, was weak. The book is essentially just a bundle of separate research essays. But instead of academic research writing qu......more

Goodreads review by Emma on September 04, 2024

The content of the book is so so important, but I feel like I was a bit disappointed in the execution. 1) particularly at the beginning, the author just has lots of passages that are strings of random quotes with very little of their own writing interspersed. 2) the overall argument of the book isn’......more

Goodreads review by Mark on September 05, 2024

Food politics? In all honesty, I didn’t know that such a concept or topic existed. However, thanks to Andrea Freeman's wonderful, deeply absorbing book about a commodity so common that many of us simply take its existence for granted, I am now not only wiser about food politics, but am aware of such......more