I would like to research the historical, cultural, institutional, and social aspects of dumpster diving. I would like to interview folks who use dumpster diving as a means to subsistence in the town of Boone as well as interviewing different establishments upon their waste policies and donation to food banks. This will certainly lead to examining the relationship between the capitalist system and its connection with the phenomena of dumpster diving. However, it would be interesting to conclude with the idea that dumpster diving can give birth to communities that function under the model of gift economies.
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Tuesday, January 31, 2012
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
More questions.....
Is sustainable consumption feasible for the working class in todays society? What are other cost-efficient ways for folks to practice sustainable consumption patterns? Are urban and rural foraging feasible options? Guerilla community gardens?
........I imagine detroit would be good a place to examine.........
I like the idea of examining dumpster diving, redistributing wasted food, as civil disobedience. I think it would be very interesting to examine really how much do industrial grocery stores donate to organizations like the hospitality house and how much goes to waste, comparative to folks that are hungry.
Roadside Cornucopeia
Why are some plants considered weeds when they are both edible and medicinal? There are many plants that grow on the side of the road or that we pluck out in gardens, which were seen as food or in some instances sacred medicine by indigenous people. It would be interesting to see what factors have shaped our disregard for some of these plants today. I initially thought of the dandelion, which most folks tend to value just for their aesthetics. Where as this plant actually has multiple use-values. I like the idea of exploring urban and rural foraging as a sustainable practice.
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
Vague idea for senior project
I am interested in gift economies. it might be interesting to research gift economies and their ability to enhance community. I like the idea of small random acts of kindness. It might be interesting to start a thankful campaign, getting a better idea of the most marginilized workers in Boone, most likely undocumented workers, and organizing maybe weekly meals of gratitude for their unappreciated work.
Thursday, January 19, 2012
Influences on my Concentration
When I was in high school I did my senior exit project on medicinal plants. My father is life long friends with plant and wildlife guru Doug Elliott.He was my mentor on the project and helped me to see the reasoning behind why plants are not valued as valid medicines in our culture, which in simplistic terms is largely shaped by Capitalism. My uncle took me on walks through out the project introducing me to a variety of medicinal plants that grew in my back yard. In the following years I began collecting these plants to supplement into my diet because of their adaptive qualities of preventing different illnesses. I realized that collecting the plants myself made me much more aware of how i treated my body, as well as how different plants were able to alter the way i felt.
I was homeschooled for the first fourteen years of my life and was offered a very kinaesthetic education. I realized when I entered college that I did not want to enter a field that focused predominately on writing. I flirted with several disciplines that lended to hands on learning experiences, but did not feel passionate enough about one to settle down. I took classes within the industrial design department, apparel and textiles, and than discovered the sustainable development department. The Principles of Sustainable development class first introduced me to the disturbing processes utilized in the industrial food system, with its exploitation of the earth, animals, and humans. As knowledge is often like chains, I could not leave this information behind.
I discovered the interdisciplinary department after taking histories of knowledges as a requirement through the sustainable development degree. I realized I could continue my education that would most engage me by combining multiple disciplines. At first I saw these disciplines as very separate experiences, especially because of the unsustainable jargon of the fashion and product design fields. However, sometimes these disciplines did come into dialogue with one another. For instance, I participated in a fashion show organized by a sustainable development graduate student, who challenged us to make couture out of trash.
Several readings have aided my self-designed studies. Paul Hawken's "Blessed Unrest" was of large significance in his metaphor of the thousands of non-profit organizations,which are working for social justice, environmental justice, and indigenous rights, as the immune system for the earth. This comparison of the microcosm of bodily processes in humans to the larger macrocosmic processes of the earth has had great influences on my way of thinking. Paul Stamet's book "mycelium running" has also been of great influence on my major. He introduces the prolific healing abilities of fungi for both the human body and the ecology of the earth.
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