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Visceral Encounters: A Political Ecology of Urban Land, Food, and Housing in Dubuque, Iowa

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  • Carrie Chennault

    (Department of Sociology, Iowa State University, Ames, IA 50011, USA)

  • Laura Klavitter

    (Washington Neighborhood Community Garden, Dubuque, IA 52001, USA)

  • Lynn Sutton

    (Dubuque Community Activist, Dubuque, IA 52001, USA)

Abstract

Through a praxis of co-authorship between a university scholar and two community gardeners/organizers/activists, this article showcases the ways in which knowledge, practices, and relationalities emergent in community gardens in Dubuque, Iowa USA directly engage with the politics of food, land, and housing. The authors engage in co-authorship across university and community boundaries to ontologically reframe knowledge production and draw critical attention to the everyday livelihoods and political ecologies experienced within marginalized communities. We use extended conversations and interviews to analyze the food, land, and housing issues that emerge in the context of uneven racial relations and neighborhood revitalization. We then organize our analysis using a Political Ecology of the Body (PEB) framework to consider how people’s bodily, emotional, and social lives impact their relationalities with food, gardening, and neighborhood spaces. Our findings show that community gardening efforts are transforming the Washington and North End neighborhoods—even if these changes appear to outsiders to be small-scale or difficult to measure—while also calling attention to the anti-oppression and anti-racism work that remains to be done. Our co-authorship demonstrates how community gardeners and university partners can work together to contest histories of marginalization and foster more socially just relations.

Suggested Citation

  • Carrie Chennault & Laura Klavitter & Lynn Sutton, 2019. "Visceral Encounters: A Political Ecology of Urban Land, Food, and Housing in Dubuque, Iowa," Social Sciences, MDPI, vol. 8(4), pages 1-25, April.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jscscx:v:8:y:2019:i:4:p:122-:d:224171
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    3. Michael Carolan, 2016. "Adventurous food futures: knowing about alternatives is not enough, we need to feel them," Agriculture and Human Values, Springer;The Agriculture, Food, & Human Values Society (AFHVS), vol. 33(1), pages 141-152, March.
    4. Sarah Elwood & Victoria Lawson & Samuel Nowak, 2015. "Middle-Class Poverty Politics: Making Place, Making People," Annals of the American Association of Geographers, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 105(1), pages 123-143, January.
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