Building Nature's Market: The Business and Politics of Natural Foods

Building Nature's Market: The Business and Politics of Natural Foods

by Laura J. Miller (Author)

Synopsis

For the first 150 years of their existence, natural foods were consumed primarily by body-builders, hippies, religious sects, and believers in nature cure. And those consumers were dismissed by the medical establishment and food producers as kooks, faddists, and dangerous quacks. In the 1980s, broader support for natural foods took hold and the past fifteen years have seen an explosion everything from healthy-eating superstores to mainstream institutions like hospitals, schools, and workplace cafeterias advertising their fresh-from-the-garden ingredients.Building Nature's Market shows how the meaning of natural foods was transformed as they changed from a culturally marginal, religiously inspired set of ideas and practices valorizing asceticism to a bohemian lifestyle to a mainstream consumer choice. Laura J. Miller argues that the key to understanding this transformation is to recognize the leadership of the natural foods industry. Rather than a simple tale of cooptation by market forces, Miller contends the participation of business interests encouraged the natural foods movement to be guided by a radical skepticism of established cultural authority. She challenges assumptions that private enterprise is always aligned with social elites, instead arguing that profit-minded entities can make common cause with and even lead citizens in advocating for broad-based social and cultural change.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 288
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Published: 20 Nov 2017

ISBN 10: 022650137X
ISBN 13: 9780226501376

Media Reviews
If you think that markets and movements don't mix, think again. In Miller's entertaining and authoritative account of natural foods, we see business sustaining long-term dissent. Building Nature's Market is a must-read for social movement scholars, as well as anyone concerned with economic culture. --Lyn Spillman author of Solidarity in Strategy: Making Business Meaningful in American Trade Associations
Author Bio
Laura J. Miller is associate professor of sociology at Brandeis University. She is the author of Reluctant Capitalists: Bookselling and the Culture of Consumption, also published by the University of Chicago Press.