Modern Hungers: Food and Power in Twentieth-century Germany

Modern Hungers: Food and Power in Twentieth-century Germany
ISBN-10
019060509X
ISBN-13
9780190605094
Category
History
Pages
317
Language
English
Published
2017
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Author
Alice Autumn Weinreb

Description

During the first decades of the twentieth century, modern states fighting World War I and II for the first time experimented with feeding - and starving - entire populations. Within the new globalizing economy, food became intimately intertwined with waging war. In Europe, starvation claimedmore lives than any other weapon of war. As Alice Weinreb shows in Modern Hungers, nowhere was this more apparent than in Germany, initiator and loser of both wars. The end of armed conflict in 1945 did not mean that such military strategies declined in significance. Fears of hunger and fantasies ofabundance were instead reframed within a new political system that saw the world as divided between capitalism and communism. Divided Germany rapidly became the key European stage for the Cold War.During the postwar decades, Europeans lived longer, possessed more goods, and were healthier than ever before. Nothing signaled this shift more clearly than the disappearance of famine from the continent. So powerful was the experience of post-1945 abundance that it is hard today to imagine a timewhen the specter of hunger haunted Europe, demographers feared that malnutrition would mean the end of whole nations, and the primary targets for American food aid was Belgium and Germany rather than Africa. Yet under both capitalist and communist systems, economic growth and political prioritiesproved inseparable from the modern food system. Drawing on sources ranging from military records to cookbooks to economic and nutritional studies from East and West German archives, Modern Hungers reveals similarities and striking ruptures in popular experience and state policy relating to theindustrial food economy. It thus offers historical context for many key contemporary concerns ranging from humanitarian food aid to the gender-wage gap to the obesity epidemic.

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