Food changes with how it鈥檚 grown, where, when, and by whom. Food also changes with the processes of being seeded, harvested, marketed, stored, fermented, cooked, talked about, and eaten. From flavors of local seasonings to the global effects of climate change on foraging and agricultural systems, this program invites recognition of the patterns whereby foodscapes and landscapes change, specifically patterns of how humans change and are changed by food. What can be learned when as hunter-gatherers who have become agritourists, we intentionally move through different landscapes while tasting culturally relevant foods? We鈥檒l use observation and expressive arts to understand how language itself reflects the changes that inform and are informed by foods such as caviar, challah, and cocoa tea. We鈥檒l engage with the cultural and ecological ingredients that shape and are shaped by, for example, banana bread, bonbons, and baloney.
With increasing intention and intensity we鈥檒l move between viscerally experiencing how food changes in 鈥渞eal鈥 places and reading about and watching food in climate fiction (e.g., Mbue鈥檚听How Beautiful We Were,听鈥檚听Hunger,聽Ghosh鈥檚听The Hungry Tide, Joon Ho鈥檚听Parasite,听础迟飞辞辞诲鈥檚聽MaddAddam,听Simpson鈥檚听This Accident of Being Lost). Our case study approach may include these and others鈥 imaginings of food in literature and film as well as place-based learning during field trips. Why? As Wendell Berry puts it, 鈥渢he circumstances, the place,听knowing聽your place鈥攊s all-important. [T]here鈥檚 this thing I wrote, 鈥楨ating is an agricultural act,鈥 I鈥檓 so sorry about 鈥 By itself it鈥檚 baloney.鈥 During group field trips and then student field studies we鈥檒l ask where, when, why, and at what cost eating is knowable as an (agri)cultural act 鈥 and by whom.
Throughout winter and spring quarters, our movement between researching global food histories and hands-on learning in food labs and a weekly farm practicum will enable us to observe patterns whereby in the eating process food changes, changes the eater, and reflects changes in landscapes.聽For one week during winter quarter and for two weeks during spring quarter, students will be supported to design, engage in, and document field studies in locations of student choice through in-program individual learning contracts.聽
Food Changes: Eating as an Agricultural Act? will collaborate with numerous community groups (e.g., SW WA Food Hub, WSU Ag Extension, Culinary Breeding Network), other campus programs, and campus events including the various Center for Climate Action and Sustainability (CSAS), Center for Entrepreneurial Learning and Transformational Learning (CELTC), Art Lecture Series. This program will be excellent preparation for students interested in the 2026-27 study abroad program Bittersweet: Cocoa and Permaculture in Trinidad.
Anticipated Credit Equivalencies:
Winter
4 - Climate Literature and Film
4 - Creative Writing: Food and Difference
4 - Cultural Studies in Food and Agriculture
4 - Farm Practicum: Winter
Spring
4 - Food in Literature and Film
4 -聽Multispecies Ethnography
4 - Field Studies in Food and Agriculture
4 - Farm Practicum: Spring
Registration
Academic Details
Agriculture; Climate and Environmental Justice; Cultural Studies; Education; Food Justice; Food Studies; Food Systems; Gender, Sexuality, and Queer Studies; Marketing, Media Production, Media Studies
$250 per quarter covers conference fees ($40), transportation, lodging, and meals for a field trip ($160), and a required lab fee ($50).