Gandhi, Yogic Self-Control, and Food Justice

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

2016-04-18

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Ohio State University. Mershon Center for International Security Studies

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

M. K. Gandhi is not traditionally thought of as a theorist of food politics or food justice. Yet, Gandhi had much to say about the relationship between food and power. In this essay, I will explore productive intersections between Gandhi’s thought and contemporary discourses of food politics. I will highlight the manner in which Gandhi’s writings on food anticipate contemporary biopolitical concerns, pointing to the body as a site for exertion of power by modern civilization and its attendant components: the state, capital, science, biomedicine, technology and so forth. also demonstrate how Gandhi enlists the notions of self-discipline, self-mastery and self-inquiry from India’s yogic traditions, reinterpreting them as specifically political solutions for the incursions of modern civilization and imperial rule into the body. Finally, I seek to problematize Gandhi’s yogic solution, asking how it might speak to contemporary critiques of neoliberalism within food scholarship.

Description

Keywords

Ghandi, food politics, biopolitics

Citation