Online via UI Library eCatalog., This article analyzed a spectrum of "food waste" frames appearing in contemporary U.S. public discourse, featuring a selection of selected television series, documentaries, a book, newspaper articles, social movement organizations, and citizen/community groups. Authors emphasized the importance of this issue and reported that they "anticipate a steady increase in the quantity and diversity of voices in food waste public discourse in the coming years."
Gavitt, A.R., Jr. (author / University of Connecticut, College of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Department of Agricultural Publications) and University of Connecticut, College of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Department of Agricultural Publications
Format:
Conference paper
Publication Date:
unknown
Published:
USA
Location:
Agricultural Communications Documentation Center, Funk Library, University of Illinois Box: 27 Document Number: B02745
Notes:
AgComm Teaching, Mimeographed, [19- ]. 14 p. Paper presented at the 54th Annual Conference of the American Association of Agricultural College Editors; July 15; Cornell University, Ithaca, NY
Online via keyword search of UI e-catalog., Authors exmined the "forgotten history" of a scientific literature involving relationship between the media and farmers from the 1960s to date. "Farmers were once greatly valued in the media. There was a tacit agreement between members of the farming, government, and journalistic elite on the portrayal of the modern farmer figure. And yet this unity began to dissolve in the 1980s. Farmers were challenged in the public eye: awareness was raised about union struggles, doubt was cast on the cost of agricultural activities financed by society, new environmental concerns arose, promoted by journalists, and a series of health-related crises flourished in the 1990s."
32 pages., via online journal., The phrase in the title is not mine. I am borrowing it here from syndicated
columnist and cowboy poet Baxter Black, who borrowed the title of one
of his own columns “Growth of Agricultural Ignorance” from the editor of
the Delmarva Farmer (a weekly agricultural publication serving the Delaware,
Maryland, and Virginia region). In many ways I agree with the term, and
believe it is accurate in part to describe American society in the late twentieth
century and into the twenty-first. Thus, I would like to take this opportunity
to discuss some trends in American agriculture, and for that matter, agricultural history, and some concerns that I have about them. Not all the trends are bad, of course, and perhaps in some ways, at least, American society is less agriculturally ignorant than Black and others suggest.
Via online. 3 pages., Subtitle: A recent 8,000-word article in the New Yorker reaffirmed a trend in journalism of turning important scientific issues into a circus sideshow.