“Don’t pack a pest”: parts, wholes, and the porosity of food borders
Author(s)
Paxson, Heather Anne
DownloadAccepted version (305.6Kb)
Open Access Policy
Open Access Policy
Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike
Terms of use
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Food retailers, restaurateurs and transnational families rely on continual border-crossings for the global circulation of foodstuffs. Those crossings are highly regulated. Not everything gets in. This paper provides an overview of how food safety is (unevenly) enacted at U.S. ports of entry. Where government regulators and enforcement agents perceive in certain foods danger of adulteration or contamination, importers and producers also experience threat to customary practices of foodmaking, provisioning and commerce. Synecdochic, part-for-whole, reasoning guides food journeys and helps determine the fate of perishable foods as they attempt to cross semi-permeable thresholds that delineate and connect nation-states, and that make possible, even as they also restrict, the flow of international trade.
Date issued
2019-07Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of AnthropologyJournal
Food, Culture and Society: An International Journal of Multidisciplinary Research
Publisher
Informa UK Limited
Citation
Paxson, Heather. '“Don’t pack a pest”: parts, wholes, and the porosity of food borders.' Food, Culture and Society: An International Journal of Multidisciplinary Research 22, 5 (July 2019): 657-673. © 2019 Association for the Study of Food and Society
Version: Author's final manuscript
ISSN
1552-8014
1751-7443