Cultivating Livability

Cultivating Livability Food, Class, and the Urban Future in India

Paperback (21 May 2024)

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Publisher's Synopsis

What urban food networks reveal about middle class livability in times of transformation

In recent years, the concept of "livability" has captured the global imagination, influencing discussions about the implications of climate change on human life and inspiring rankings of "most livable cities" in popular publications. But what really makes for a livable life, and for whom?

 

Cultivating Livability takes Bengaluru, India, as a case study-a city that is alternately described as India's most and least livable megacity, where rapid transformation is undergirded by inequalities evident in the food networks connecting peri-urban farmers and the middle-class public. Anthropologist Camille Frazier probes the meaning of "livability" in Bengaluru through ethnographic work among producers and consumers, corporate intermediaries and urban information technology professionals.

 

Examining the varying efforts to reconfigure processes of food production, distribution, retail, and consumption, she reveals how these intersections are often rooted in and exacerbate ongoing forms of disenfranchisement that privilege some lives at the expense of others.

Book information

ISBN: 9781517914998
Publisher: University of Minnesota Press
Imprint: University of Minnesota Press
Pub date:
DEWEY: 338.476413095487
DEWEY edition: 23
Language: English
Number of pages: 224
Weight: 286g
Height: 138mm
Width: 216mm
Spine width: 14mm