Lecture: Charles Waldheim, "Agricultural Modernization and Collective Memory: 50 Species-Towns"
Wednesday, October 2, 5:30pm
1100 A+DS
Charles Waldheim’s lecture, “50 Species-Towns,” presents an alternative model for agricultural modernization and agrarian new-town planning in China, which is derived from a close reading of Chinese agricultural history and village life in support of the vital economic, environmental, and societal reforms currently underway. The research project is informed by the extraordinary wealth of culinary diversity and heritage crops found across China. The most significant of these, the fifty most cherished and most vulnerable to loss, shape the proposal. Building upon the “one town, one crop” model of economic integration, the proposal imagines fifty small-scale agricultural new towns across China. Each is conceived in relation to a single, specific heritage crop and associated agroecological system deemed to be of great culinary and cultural value. This model offers the potential to reconcile the conflicting demands of agricultural modernization, economic integration, and enhanced quality of life while maintaining China’s extraordinary culinary culture. 50 Species-Towns aspires to reconcile the enlightened goal of improving the quality of life in the countryside without sacrificing the collective meaning derived from centuries of agrarian and culinary cultural heritage.
The lecture will be followed by a conversation with Professor Clare Lyster.
Free and open to all; see you there!