Description
Book SynopsisAdolf Hitler was a vegetarian and the Dachau concentration camp had an organic herb garden. Vegetarianism, organic farming, and other such practices have enticed a wide variety of Germans, from socialists, liberals, and radical anti-Semites in the nineteenth century to fascists, communists, and Greens in the twentieth century. Corinna Treitel offers a fascinating new account of how Germans became world leaders in developing more ''natural'' ways to eat and farm. Used to conserve nutritional resources with extreme efficiency at times of hunger and to optimize the nation''s health at times of nutritional abundance, natural foods and farming belong to the biopolitics of German modernity. Eating Nature in Modern Germany brings together histories of science, medicine, agriculture, the environment, and popular culture to offer the most thorough and historically comprehensive treatment yet of this remarkable story.
Trade Review'Corinna Treitel has written a highly readable and informative book … She shows how important life reform was for the development of modern alternative diets and at the same time makes clear that a decades-long dynamic of criticism and co-optation between vastly different actors propelled the consolidation and wide dissemination of the 'natural diet'.' Laura-Elena Keck, translated from H-Soz-Kult (www.hsozkult.de)
'… well written and carefully researched … Treitel's examination of the discourse on eating naturally challenges our understanding of biopolitics by arguing that biopolitics is the result of both popular impulse to self-rule as well as authoritarian attempts to coerce and as such is coproduced by laypeople and experts.' Gesine Gerhard, The Journal of Modern History
Table of ContentsIntroduction. Natural, a German history; 1. Hunger, citizenship, and the gospel of nature; 2. Being natural; 3. Nature and the nutrition question in Imperial and Weimar Germany; 4. Humans are only plants in nature's garden: remaking German agriculture, 1870–1939; 5. Nature and the Nazi diet; 6. Mainstreaming nature, pursuing health: food and the environmental turn in West Germany; 7. Masking nature, prescribing health: the East German experience; Conclusion. The natural temptation.