A Pig and a Garden

M. White
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

Much of the scholarship on the work and legacy of activist Fannie Lou Hamer concentrates on her tireless efforts for civil/human rights and African American representation and access to electoral politics. This chapter brings to light an important project she started in 1969, Freedom Farms Cooperative in Sunflower County, MS. An agricultural cooperative built on 680-acres, Freedom Farm included a pig bank, Head Start program, community gardens, commercial kitchen, a garment factory, sewing cooperative, tool bank, and low-income, affordable housing as strategies to support the needs of African Americans who were fired and evicted for exercising the right to vote. Freedom Farm offered these sharecroppers and tenant farmers educational and re-training opportunities including health care and disaster relief for those who wanted to stay in the Mississippi Delta. Using a historical method to analyze extensive archival records, this chapter offers an analysis of Freedom Farm and illuminates valuable lessons on agriculture as resistance, and alternative strategies of rebuilding and investing in sustainable com- munities. Using the principles of collective and shared ownership, Freedom Farm and the work of Ms. Hamer, offer us important and valuable lessons on rebuilding our communities and investing in sustainable cities around food production.
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一只猪和一个花园
关于活动家Fannie Lou Hamer的工作和遗产的大部分学术研究都集中在她为民权/人权、非裔美国人的代表权和参与选举政治所做的不懈努力上。这一章介绍了她在1969年开始的一个重要项目,美国太阳花县的自由农场合作社。这是一个占地680英亩的农业合作社,自由农场包括一个养猪库、启智计划、社区花园、商业厨房、一家制衣厂、缝纫合作社、工具库和低收入、负担得起的住房,作为支持因行使投票权而被解雇和驱逐的非洲裔美国人的需求的策略。自由农场为这些佃农和佃农提供教育和再培训的机会,包括为那些想留在密西西比三角洲的人提供医疗保健和救灾服务。使用历史的方法来分析大量的档案记录,本章提供了对自由农场的分析,并阐明了农业作为抵抗的宝贵经验,以及重建和投资可持续社区的替代策略。自由农场和哈默女士的工作运用集体和共同所有制原则,为我们提供了重建社区和围绕粮食生产投资可持续城市的重要宝贵经验。
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A Pig and a Garden Drawing on the Past toward a Food Sovereign Future Intellectual Traditions in Black Agriculture Bypass the Middlemen and Feed the Community Agricultural Self-Determination on a Regional Scale
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