In this Book

A Bun in the Oven: How the Food and Birth Movements Resist Industrialization

Book
Barbara Katz Rothman
2016
Published by: NYU Press
summary

There are people dedicated to improving the way we eat, and people dedicated to improving the way we give birth. A Bun in the Oven is the first comparison of these two social movements. The food movement has seemingly exploded, but little has changed in the diet of most Americans. And while there’s talk of improving the childbirth experience, most births happen in large hospitals, about a third result in C-sections, and the US does not fare well in infant or maternal outcomes.
In A Bun in the Oven Barbara Katz Rothman traces the food and the birth movements through three major phases over the course of the 20th century in the United States: from the early 20th century era of scientific management; through to the consumerism of Post World War II with its ‘turn to the French’ in making things gracious; to the late 20th century counter-culture midwives and counter-cuisine cooks. The book explores the tension throughout all of these eras between the industrial demands of mass-management and profit-making, and the social movements—composed largely of women coming together from very different feminist sensibilities—which are working to expose the harmful consequences of industrialization, and make birth and food both meaningful and healthy.
Katz Rothman, an internationally recognized sociologist named ‘midwife to the movement’ by the Midwives Alliance of North America, turns her attention to the lessons to be learned from the food movement, and the parallel forces shaping both of these consumer-based social movements. In both movements, issues of the natural, the authentic, and the importance of ‘meaningful’ and ‘personal’ experiences get balanced against discussions of what is sensible, convenient and safe. And both movements operate in a context of commercial and corporate interests, which places profit and efficiency above individual experiences and outcomes. A Bun in the Oven brings new insight into the relationship between our most intimate, personal experiences, the industries that control them, and the social movements that resist the industrialization of life and seek to birth change.

Table of Contents

Cover

Half-Title Page, Title Page, Copyright

Contents

pp. v-vi

Acknowledgments

pp. vii-viii

1. A Tale of Two Social Movements

pp. 1-15

2. Artisanal Workers

pp. 16-34

3. No Place Like Home

pp. 35-51

4. Living the Embodied Life

pp. 52-66

5. Two Movements in Three Phases: An Introduction

pp. 67-74

6. Phase One: Scientific Society

pp. 75-93

7. Phase Two: Consumer Society

pp. 94-111

8. Phase Three: The Counterculture

pp. 112-138

9. The Risky Business of Life

pp. 139-199

10. Great Expectations: A Childbirth Movement for Now

pp. 200-222

Notes

pp. 223-232

References

pp. 233-242

Index

pp. 243-252

About the Author

pp. 253
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