Writing-Based Inquiry Seminars:
Descriptions for Fall 2007
(please note: section topics and descriptions are subject to change)
Title: Food Culture and Environment
Course: WBIS 188
Section: 030, 031, 037
Instructor: Instructor
It has been said, "we are what we eat." If this is so, food is not something we merely consume for sustenance, but a lens through which we may analyze our society and culture. Our very choices in food--to eat, or to refuse to eat at McDonald's, to drink fair trade, shade grown, organic coffee, or to go for "Folger's in your cup", to opt for a tossed salad or a hefty meat and potatoes meal, to buy our groceries at a supermarket or a farmer's market--tells as much about us as our choices of friends, political parties, places to live, careers we prepare for, and the values we live by. Thus the study of food can be a way to address broader themes of globalization, market economics, environmental concerns, and ultimately, social justice.
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Last modified: February 16, 2007Send comments, questions, etc., to henson@uwosh.edu