|
Book Reviews |
Vol. 2, No. 1
Hungry
for Profit
The Agribusiness Threat to Farmers, Food,
and the Environment.
Edited by Fred Magdoff, John Bellamy Foster,
and Frederick H. Buttel
Reviewed by Erin Royster
 rom
biotechnology to farm workers movements to the origins of capitalism,
Hungry for Profit covers a variety of topics relevant to today's food
and agriculture crisis. What makes this collection of thirteen essays
different from other such collections is that each issue is examined within
a radical, socialist critique of capitalism.
"The capitalist system runs counter to a rational agriculture,"
wrote Marx. The editors use this quotation to describe the moral of the
book.
One of the most appealing aspects of Hungry for Profit is that most of
the authors stay away from tedious economic data and policy analysis,
instead focusing on the general trends and social consequences of capitalism
to describe the current state of agriculture.
At the same time, author Philip McMichael contributes a thorough, fact-based
analysis of global food politics, explaining how "Global regulatory
agencies like the WTO threaten to entrench (Northern) agribusiness power
at the expense of farmers across the world, intensifying the de-stabilization
of rural communities and further compromise local food security."
More impressive still are authors, Middendorf, Skladany, Ransom, and
Busch who manage to escape the popular wholesale rejection of technology
in their anaylses of agricultural biotechnologies. Instead, they state,
"the new biotechnologies are potentially beneficial to society, but
not unless the institutional basis for technology choice are democratized."
On a more historical bent, editors Foster and Magdoff discuss Marx's
analysis of the work of early soil scientists Justus von Liebig and James
Anderson that led him to conclude that the "conscious and rational
treatment of the land as permanent communal property [is] the inalieable
condition for the existence and reproduction of the chain of human generations."
Ellen Meiksins Wood contributes another important history lesson in "The
Agrarian Origins of Capitalism."Arguing that agrarian capitalism
emerged before industrial capitalism, she states "The emergence of
the market as a determinant of social reproduction presupposed its penetration
into the production of life's most basic necessity, food."
While Hungry for Profit is surely a remedy to the dearth of current radical
literature focusing on the state of agriculture today, its purely socialist
critique fails to address all of the necessary components of "a more
environmentally sound and humane food system," which the authors
advocate. Given the editors do recognize that "the job of creating
a just and environmentally sound food system cannot be separated from
the creation of a just and environmentally sound society," they fall
just short of presenting a truly radical and imaginative picture of what
that food system and society would look like. Further, they fail completely
to present a vision of the political process by which we might all agree
(or not) on such a food system, without which, the chances of getting
there are slim.
Magdoff, Fred, Bellamy, John, Foster, and Buttel, Frederick H., eds.
Hungry for Profit:
The Agribusiness Threat to Farmers, Food, and the Environment.
New York: Monthly Review Press, 2000.
Erin Royster studies radical agriculture
at the Institute for Social
Ecology, where she has been involved in developing the organic gardens
and permaculture orchard. Currently, she is working on her senior study,
Kicking Capitalism Out of Food, and will be assistant teaching
the Radical Agriculture course during the ISE's Ecology
and Community 2001 program.

Published by the Institute for
Social Ecology
|