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Carl J. Griffin The Politics of Hunger (Hardback)

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Book Title
The Politics of Hunger
Title
The Politics of Hunger
EAN
9781526145628
ISBN
9781526145628
Release Date
01/31/2020
Release Year
2020
Subtitle
Protest, Poverty and Policy in England, c. 1750–c. 1840
ISBN-10
1526145626
Country/Region of Manufacture
GB
Genre
History
Subject
History & Theory, Social History, Europe / Great Britain / General
Subject Area
History, Political Science
Publication Name
Politics of Hunger : Protest, Poverty and Policy in England, C. 1750-C. 1840
Item Length
9.2 in
Publisher
Manchester University Press
Publication Year
2020
Type
Textbook
Format
Hardcover
Language
English
Item Height
0.7 in
Author
Carl J. Griffin
Item Width
6.1 in
Item Weight
0 Oz
Number of Pages
280 Pages

關於產品

Product Information

Systematically explores what it is conceived as 'hunger politics': the articulations of hunger as a tool of protest by poor consumers; its framing as a problem in the making of public policy; and its (elite) political languages and the attendant effects. -- .

Product Identifiers

Publisher
Manchester University Press
ISBN-10
1526145626
ISBN-13
9781526145628
eBay Product ID (ePID)
8038684162

Product Key Features

Author
Carl J. Griffin
Publication Name
Politics of Hunger : Protest, Poverty and Policy in England, C. 1750-C. 1840
Format
Hardcover
Language
English
Subject
History & Theory, Social History, Europe / Great Britain / General
Publication Year
2020
Type
Textbook
Subject Area
History, Political Science
Number of Pages
280 Pages

Dimensions

Item Length
9.2 in
Item Height
0.7 in
Item Width
6.1 in
Item Weight
0 Oz

Additional Product Features

Intended Audience
College Audience
Reviews
'The Politics of Hunger is a deeply learned and humane book, rich in archival detail and judiciously deployed anecdotes about the real lives of those who faced food scarcity as their primary, quotidian reality. [.] Malthus argued 'a satisfactory history of this kind, of one people, and of one period, would require the constant and minute attention of an observing mind during a long life.' Griffin's is such a mind and The Politics of Hunger is such a book.'Journal of Historical Geography'Francis Bacon once observed that "rebellions of the belly are the worst." This highly original monograph explores how "hunger politics" operated in the 18th and 19th centuries as a weapon of protest wielded by the undernourished urban and rural populations of England. The fierce suppression of the food rioters of the 1790s led to new forms of protest: incendiarism, cattle maiming, and threatening letters. By 1800 wages had replaced the price of food as the "critical component in working families' living standards." Griffin (Univ. of Sussex, UK) challenges the conventional idea that the "Hungry Forties" witnessed the rediscovery of hunger. Instead, he shows how the "twin discourses" of hunger and starvation survived from 1801 into the 1840s. A close-grained study of broadsides, ballads, letters, and speeches provides the evidence. Griffin also explores the effects of dubious local and national policies, such as the Speenhamland system for supplementing the wages of workers, which led to their impoverishment as farmers underpaid their workers, knowing that public assistance would make up the difference. English theorists reduced the poor to a "distinct and decidedly animalistic race." As Griffin concludes, "hunger defined popular protest and popular politics.'--D. R. Bisson, Belmont UniversitySumming Up: Highly recommended.Reprinted with permission from Choice Reviews. All rights reserved. Copyright by the American Library Association.'The politics of hunger is a timely and welcome contribution to ongoing debates surrounding food security,protest, and governmental policy in Britain. [...] This is a pertinent, well-researched, and compassionatebook that should become required reading for students of hunger, protest, politics, and public policy in modern Britain. In every chapter, Griffin combines studious archival research with acute theoretical insights to reveal how the discourses of hunger and starvation became engrained into the fabric of everyday life, governance and resistance. [...] The politics of hunger will stand as a foundational text for a promising vein of future research.'Leonard Baker, Agricultural History Review, 'The Politics of Hunger is a deeply learned and humane book, rich in archival detail and judiciously deployed anecdotes about the real lives of those who faced food scarcity as their primary, quotidian reality. [.] Malthus argued 'a satisfactory history of this kind, of one people, and of one period, would require the constant and minute attention of an observing mind during a long life.' Griffin's is such a mind and The Politics of Hunger is such a book.'Journal of Historical Geography, 'The Politics of Hunger is a deeply learned and humane book, rich in archival detail and judiciously deployed anecdotes about the real lives of those who faced food scarcity as their primary, quotidian reality. [...] Malthus argued 'a satisfactory history of this kind, of one people, and of one period, would require the constant and minute attention of an observing mind during a long life.' Griffin's is such a mind and The Politics of Hunger is such a book.' Journal of Historical Geography 'Francis Bacon once observed that "rebellions of the belly are the worst." This highly original monograph explores how "hunger politics" operated in the 18th and 19th centuries as a weapon of protest wielded by the undernourished urban and rural populations of England. The fierce suppression of the food rioters of the 1790s led to new forms of protest: incendiarism, cattle maiming, and threatening letters. By 1800 wages had replaced the price of food as the "critical component in working families' living standards." Griffin (Univ. of Sussex, UK) challenges the conventional idea that the "Hungry Forties" witnessed the rediscovery of hunger. Instead, he shows how the "twin discourses" of hunger and starvation survived from 1801 into the 1840s. A close-grained study of broadsides, ballads, letters, and speeches provides the evidence. Griffin also explores the effects of dubious local and national policies, such as the Speenhamland system for supplementing the wages of workers, which led to their impoverishment as farmers underpaid their workers, knowing that public assistance would make up the difference. English theorists reduced the poor to a "distinct and decidedly animalistic race." As Griffin concludes, "hunger defined popular protest and popular politics.' --D. R. Bisson, Belmont University Summing Up: Highly recommended. Reprinted with permission from Choice Reviews. All rights reserved. Copyright by the American Library Association. 'The politics of hunger is a timely and welcome contribution to ongoing debates surrounding food security, protest, and governmental policy in Britain. [...] This is a pertinent, well-researched, and compassionate book that should become required reading for students of hunger, protest, politics, and public policy in modern Britain. In every chapter, Griffin combines studious archival research with acute theoretical insights to reveal how the discourses of hunger and starvation became engrained into the fabric of everyday life, governance and resistance. [...] The politics of hunger will stand as a foundational text for a promising vein of future research.' Leonard Baker, Agricultural History Review 'The politics of hunger is a pioneering study that examines the concept of hunger including the ways in which policy makers and the poor constructed meaning about hunger. [...] It provides an excellent foundation for those who want to rethink the history of families and communities through the lens of hunger.' Family & Community History, ' The Politics of Hunger is a deeply learned and humane book, rich in archival detail and judiciously deployed anecdotes about the real lives of those who faced food scarcity as their primary, quotidian reality. [...] Malthus argued 'a satisfactory history of this kind, of one people, and of one period, would require the constant and minute attention of an observing mind during a long life.' Griffin's is such a mind and The Politics of Hunger is such a book.' Journal of Historical Geography ' Francis Bacon once observed that "rebellions of the belly are the worst." This highly original monograph explores how "hunger politics" operated in the 18th and 19th centuries as a weapon of protest wielded by the undernourished urban and rural populations of England. The fierce suppression of the food rioters of the 1790s led to new forms of protest: incendiarism, cattle maiming, and threatening letters. By 1800 wages had replaced the price of food as the "critical component in working families' living standards." Griffin (Univ. of Sussex, UK) challenges the conventional idea that the "Hungry Forties" witnessed the rediscovery of hunger. Instead, he shows how the "twin discourses" of hunger and starvation survived from 1801 into the 1840s. A close-grained study of broadsides, ballads, letters, and speeches provides the evidence. Griffin also explores the effects of dubious local and national policies, such as the Speenhamland system for supplementing the wages of workers, which led to their impoverishment as farmers underpaid their workers, knowing that public assistance would make up the difference. English theorists reduced the poor to a "distinct and decidedly animalistic race." As Griffin concludes, "hunger defined popular protest and popular politics.' --D. R. Bisson, Belmont University Summing Up: Highly recommended. Reprinted with permission from Choice Reviews . All rights reserved. Copyright by the American Library Association. ' The politics of hunger is a timely and welcome contribution to ongoing debates surrounding food security, protest, and governmental policy in Britain. [...] This is a pertinent, well-researched, and compassionate book that should become required reading for students of hunger, protest, politics, and public policy in modern Britain. In every chapter, Griffin combines studious archival research with acute theoretical insights to reveal how the discourses of hunger and starvation became engrained into the fabric of everyday life, governance and resistance. [...] The politics of hunger will stand as a foundational text for a promising vein of future research.' Leonard Baker, Agricultural History Review, ' The Politics of Hunger is a deeply learned and humane book, rich in archival detail and judiciously deployed anecdotes about the real lives of those who faced food scarcity as their primary, quotidian reality. [...] Malthus argued 'a satisfactory history of this kind, of one people, and of one period, would require the constant and minute attention of an observing mind during a long life.' Griffin's is such a mind and The Politics of Hunger is such a book.' Journal of Historical Geography ' Francis Bacon once observed that "rebellions of the belly are the worst." This highly original monograph explores how "hunger politics" operated in the 18th and 19th centuries as a weapon of protest wielded by the undernourished urban and rural populations of England. The fierce suppression of the food rioters of the 1790s led to new forms of protest: incendiarism, cattle maiming, and threatening letters. By 1800 wages had replaced the price of food as the "critical component in working families' living standards." Griffin (Univ. of Sussex, UK) challenges the conventional idea that the "Hungry Forties" witnessed the rediscovery of hunger. Instead, he shows how the "twin discourses" of hunger and starvation survived from 1801 into the 1840s. A close-grained study of broadsides, ballads, letters, and speeches provides the evidence. Griffin also explores the effects of dubious local and national policies, such as the Speenhamland system for supplementing the wages of workers, which led to their impoverishment as farmers underpaid their workers, knowing that public assistance would make up the difference. English theorists reduced the poor to a "distinct and decidedly animalistic race." As Griffin concludes, "hunger defined popular protest and popular politics.' --D. R. Bisson, Belmont University Summing Up: Highly recommended. Reprinted with permission from Choice Reviews . All rights reserved. Copyright by the American Library Association. ' The politics of hunger is a timely and welcome contribution to ongoing debates surrounding food security, protest, and governmental policy in Britain. [...] This is a pertinent, well-researched, and compassionate book that should become required reading for students of hunger, protest, politics, and public policy in modern Britain. In every chapter, Griffin combines studious archival research with acute theoretical insights to reveal how the discourses of hunger and starvation became engrained into the fabric of everyday life, governance and resistance. [...] The politics of hunger will stand as a foundational text for a promising vein of future research.' Leonard Baker, Agricultural History Review ' The politics of hunger is a pioneering study that examines the concept of hunger including the ways in which policy makers and the poor constructed meaning about hunger. [...] It provides an excellent foundation for those who want to rethink the history of families and communities through the lens of hunger.' Family & Community History, 'The Politics of Hunger is a deeply learned and humane book, rich in archival detail and judiciously deployed anecdotes about the real lives of those who faced food scarcity as their primary, quotidian reality. [.] Malthus argued 'a satisfactory history of this kind, of one people, and of one period, would require the constant and minute attention of an observing mind during a long life.' Griffin's is such a mind and The Politics of Hunger is such a book.'Journal of Historical Geography'Francis Bacon once observed that "rebellions of the belly are the worst." This highly original monograph explores how "hunger politics" operated in the 18th and 19th centuries as a weapon of protest wielded by the undernourished urban and rural populations of England. The fierce suppression of the food rioters of the 1790s led to new forms of protest: incendiarism, cattle maiming, and threatening letters. By 1800 wages had replaced the price of food as the "critical component in working families' living standards." Griffin (Univ. of Sussex, UK) challenges the conventional idea that the "Hungry Forties" witnessed the rediscovery of hunger. Instead, he shows how the "twin discourses" of hunger and starvation survived from 1801 into the 1840s. A close-grained study of broadsides, ballads, letters, and speeches provides the evidence. Griffin also explores the effects of dubious local and national policies, such as the Speenhamland system for supplementing the wages of workers, which led to their impoverishment as farmers underpaid their workers, knowing that public assistance would make up the difference. English theorists reduced the poor to a "distinct and decidedly animalistic race." As Griffin concludes, "hunger defined popular protest and popular politics.'--D. R. Bisson, Belmont UniversitySumming Up: Highly recommended.Reprinted with permission from Choice Reviews. All rights reserved. Copyright by the American Library Association.
Table of Content
Introduction: 'the unremitted pressure': on hunger politics Part I: Protesting hunger 1 Food riots and the languages of hunger 2The persistence of the discourse of starvation in the protests of the poor Part II: Hunger policies 3 Measuring need: Speenhamland, hunger and universal pauperism 4 Dietaries and the less eligibility workhouse: or, the making of the poor as biological subjects Part III: Theorising hunger 5 The biopolitics of hunger: Malthus, Hodge and the racialisation of the poor 6 Telling the hunger of 'distant' others Conclusions
Copyright Date
2020
Dewey Decimal
362.5094209033
Dewey Edition
23
Illustrated
Yes

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