"Grow what you eat, eat what you grow": urban agriculture as middle class intervention in India

In Bengaluru, India's "IT Capital" and one of its fastest growing cities, an increasing number of middle class residents are growing fruits and vegetables in their private spaces for home consumption. This article examines the motivations and practices of Bengaluru's organic terr...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Camille Frazier
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Arizona Libraries 2018-07-01
Series:Journal of Political Ecology
Online Access:https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/JPE/article/view/22970
_version_ 1818192176649076736
author Camille Frazier
author_facet Camille Frazier
author_sort Camille Frazier
collection DOAJ
description In Bengaluru, India's "IT Capital" and one of its fastest growing cities, an increasing number of middle class residents are growing fruits and vegetables in their private spaces for home consumption. This article examines the motivations and practices of Bengaluru's organic terrace gardeners ("OTGians") in order to understand the possibilities and limitations of urban gardening as a middle class intervention into unsafe food systems and decaying urban ecologies. OTGians are driven primarily by concerns about worsening food quality and safety, and secondarily by the desire to create green spaces that counteract environmental degradation in the city. Like community gardeners in the Global North, they understand urban gardening as a way to mediate problems in the contemporary food system and the urban ecology. However, like other alternative food and environmental movements, OTGians' efforts are anchored in class-specific concerns and experiences. While they have been successful in creating a vibrant community, their efforts remain limited to the middle class. This is in large part due to the site, scale, and production practices that anchor their interventions. I briefly consider a different approach to food production in Bengaluru—that of a caste-specific farming community that has been dispossessed of much of its agricultural land in the name of urban development—to illuminate divergent histories, narratives, and practices of urban agriculture. However, I also emphasize the sites of intersection between these narratives, and suggest that OTGians can find commonalities with other food producers in the city in ways that might revolutionize Bengaluru's food future. I thus look for potential sites of collaboration and intersection in understanding the uneven power relations and politics of urban socio-natures.
first_indexed 2024-12-12T00:26:21Z
format Article
id doaj.art-80fb42293b9d433e859e526fb089afcd
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1073-0451
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-12T00:26:21Z
publishDate 2018-07-01
publisher University of Arizona Libraries
record_format Article
series Journal of Political Ecology
spelling doaj.art-80fb42293b9d433e859e526fb089afcd2022-12-22T00:44:37ZengUniversity of Arizona LibrariesJournal of Political Ecology1073-04512018-07-0125122123810.2458/v25i1.2297022261"Grow what you eat, eat what you grow": urban agriculture as middle class intervention in IndiaCamille Frazier0Clarkson UniversityIn Bengaluru, India's "IT Capital" and one of its fastest growing cities, an increasing number of middle class residents are growing fruits and vegetables in their private spaces for home consumption. This article examines the motivations and practices of Bengaluru's organic terrace gardeners ("OTGians") in order to understand the possibilities and limitations of urban gardening as a middle class intervention into unsafe food systems and decaying urban ecologies. OTGians are driven primarily by concerns about worsening food quality and safety, and secondarily by the desire to create green spaces that counteract environmental degradation in the city. Like community gardeners in the Global North, they understand urban gardening as a way to mediate problems in the contemporary food system and the urban ecology. However, like other alternative food and environmental movements, OTGians' efforts are anchored in class-specific concerns and experiences. While they have been successful in creating a vibrant community, their efforts remain limited to the middle class. This is in large part due to the site, scale, and production practices that anchor their interventions. I briefly consider a different approach to food production in Bengaluru—that of a caste-specific farming community that has been dispossessed of much of its agricultural land in the name of urban development—to illuminate divergent histories, narratives, and practices of urban agriculture. However, I also emphasize the sites of intersection between these narratives, and suggest that OTGians can find commonalities with other food producers in the city in ways that might revolutionize Bengaluru's food future. I thus look for potential sites of collaboration and intersection in understanding the uneven power relations and politics of urban socio-natures.https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/JPE/article/view/22970
spellingShingle Camille Frazier
"Grow what you eat, eat what you grow": urban agriculture as middle class intervention in India
Journal of Political Ecology
title "Grow what you eat, eat what you grow": urban agriculture as middle class intervention in India
title_full "Grow what you eat, eat what you grow": urban agriculture as middle class intervention in India
title_fullStr "Grow what you eat, eat what you grow": urban agriculture as middle class intervention in India
title_full_unstemmed "Grow what you eat, eat what you grow": urban agriculture as middle class intervention in India
title_short "Grow what you eat, eat what you grow": urban agriculture as middle class intervention in India
title_sort grow what you eat eat what you grow urban agriculture as middle class intervention in india
url https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/JPE/article/view/22970
work_keys_str_mv AT camillefrazier growwhatyoueateatwhatyougrowurbanagricultureasmiddleclassinterventioninindia