Fallow Lands of Plenty

Public Schools as Leaders in Rural Food System Relocalization

Eric Klein
Emerald
Emerald

This book can be opened with

Glassboxx eBooks and audiobooks can be opened on phones, tablets, iOS and Android devices

Paperback / softback
9798887302928
05 May 2023
$54.00
Hardback
9798887302935
05 May 2023
$100.00
eBook (ePub)
9781806601967
05 May 2023
$54.00
eBook (PDF)
9798887302942
05 May 2023
$54.00

Note on our eBooks and Audiobooks: you can read our eBooks (ePUB or PDF) and listen to audiobooks on the free Emerald Books app on iOS, Android, and desktop. Or read and listen on Emerald's online reader (ePUB eBooks and audiobooks only). To purchase a digital book you will need to create an account if you don’t already have one. After purchasing you will receive instructions on how to get started.

  • Description
  • Contents

Can public schools feed themselves? That deceptively simple question is like a fingernail picking at a fray in the fabric of 21st century public education. Fallow Lands of Plenty chronicles one high school’s attempt to feed itself and, in doing so, unravels the fabric of neoliberal education, exposes its logics of dependence and control, and begins to weave a new tapestry of education for community cooperation and resilience.

Set during the ongoing transition between post-industrial globalization and the community structures that are to come, this rich narrative moves from furrows of Appalachian red clay soil, to the mountaintop homesteads of elder seed savers, to the conveyor belts of sterilized food sorting machines, and, finally, to a school’s cafeteria on the day that 250 portions of student-grown sweet potatoes were served.

Along the way, Fallow Lands centers knowledges of place as well as the literal and metaphorical seeds of relocalized food and education systems. Critical and theoretically informed, the text disobeys the values, purpose and canon of public education and proposes a fledgling pedagogy to address the challenges of the coming age.

Foreword.

  • Section I: Introduction.
  • Chapter 1. Calf Deep in Red Clay.
  • Chapter 2. Making New roads at the Intersection of the Food and Public Education Systems.
  • Chapter 3. The Long View on 21st Century American Education.
  • Section II: Setting.
  • Chapter 4. Baily County.
  • Chapter 5. Sternhill Farm.
  • Chapter 6. Highland High School.
  • Chapter 7. Highland High School's Cafeteria.
  • Section III: Participants.
  • Chapter 8. Student-Grown Food Participants.
  • Chapter 9. The Seeds Saver of Highland High School.
  • Chapter 10. The Storyteller and His Positionalities.
  • Chapter 11. Reflexive Reflections on Student Seed Saver Recruitment.
  • Chapter 12. Reflexive Reflections on Recruiting Community Seed Savers.
  • Section IV: The Collective Forgetting.
  • Chapter 13. Seeds That Remember.
  • Chapter 14. The Fading Agricultural Traditions of Bailey County.
  • Chapter 15. 21st Century Agricultural Education.
  • Chapter 16. Seeds That Forget.
  • Section V: The Actions We Took.
  • Chapter 17. Heritages of Action.
  • Chapter 18. Horses Pulling in Different Directions.
  • Chapter 19. Local Food Systems and Food Sovereignty.
  • Chapter 20. Teaching and Learning How to Grow Our Own Food.
  • Chapter 21. Student-Grown Food Is Not Farm to School.
  • Section VI: Analysis.
  • Chapter 22. Comment on Farm to Cafeteria Success.
  • Chapter 23. System (Mis)(Re)Alignment.
  • Chapter 24. Elder Knowledge Versus School Knowledge.
  • Chapter 25. Appreciation and Values in the Cafeteria.
  • Chapter 26. Embedded Agency.
  • Chapter 27. Food as a Community Connector.
  • Section VII: Going Forward.
  • Chapter 28. Summary of Key Findings.
  • Chapter 29. Relocalization Pedagogy.
  • Chapter 30. Closing Thoughts.
  • Epilogue.
  • References.
  • A: Timeline of Activities.
  • B: Alphabetical List of Project Participants.