Free-Range Religion - (Where Religion Lives) by Adrienne Krone (Hardcover)
About this item
Highlights
- Ethical and moral concerns about food and diet commonly feature in individuals' religious identities and expressions.
- About the Author: Adrienne Krone is associate professor of environmental science and sustainability and religious studies at Allegheny College.
- 210 Pages
- Religion + Beliefs, Christianity
- Series Name: Where Religion Lives
Description
About the Book
"Ethical and moral concerns about food and diet commonly feature in individuals' religious identities and expressions. These concerns extend beyond what one should eat to include how food should be prepared and produced. As Adrienne Krone demonstrates in this ethnographic study, participants in alternative food movements are developing new ways to see food preparation and production as religious acts. Following two Christian and two Jewish food organizations, Krone complicates our understanding of American religion as religious people come together across a range of differences to change the food system. Free-Range Religion showcases the complex ways that religion lives and works within food production, marketing, and distribution. These 'free-range' religious practices blend belief and practice with secular concerns and constitute a key, albeit understudied, part of the American alternative food movement"--Book Synopsis
Ethical and moral concerns about food and diet commonly feature in individuals' religious identities and expressions. These concerns extend beyond what one should eat to include how food should be prepared and produced. As Adrienne Krone demonstrates in this ethnographic study, participants in alternative food movements are developing new ways to see food preparation and production as religious acts. Following two Christian and two Jewish food organizations, Krone complicates our understanding of American religion as religious people come together across a range of differences to change the food system.
Free-Range Religion showcases the complex ways that religion lives and works within food production, marketing, and distribution. These "free-range" religious practices blend belief and practice with secular concerns and constitute a key, albeit understudied, part of the American alternative food movement.
Review Quotes
"Adrienne Krone's wonderful Free-Range Religion is a groundbreaking addition to scholarship on religion beyond institutions and is essential reading for understanding how food production and consumption can become sacred acts."--Nora L. Rubel, Jane and Alan Batkin Chair in Jewish Studies at the University of Rochester
"Through impressive ethnographic analysis, Krone astutely demonstrates how Christian and Jewish alternative food movements are powerful examples of religious change that expand the boundaries of traditional practices and beliefs."--Rachel B. Gross, author of Beyond the Synagogue: Jewish Nostalgia as Religious Practice
About the Author
Adrienne Krone is associate professor of environmental science and sustainability and religious studies at Allegheny College.