Truth, Reconciliation, and FoodMain MenuBiographical path of class participantsThis path includes all of the participants who have helped to shape this pagePaths, tags, and annotationsThis page links to the Scalar instructions for paths, tags, and annotationsFood and Society Workshop0826c60623ca5f5c8c1eb72fc2e97084d0c44cf8
Nourishment (cattle landscape of New Mexico)
1media/manure management_thumb.jpg2019-10-22T21:35:32-07:00Food and Society Workshop0826c60623ca5f5c8c1eb72fc2e97084d0c44cf8350181Image credit: Google maps (more details at: https://sushino.wordpress.com/2009/12/09/manure-management/)plain2019-10-22T21:35:32-07:00Food and Society Workshop0826c60623ca5f5c8c1eb72fc2e97084d0c44cf8
This page is referenced by:
12019-10-06T10:59:08-07:00Valentine Cadieux bio page10Kirsten Valentine Cadieux's story of self, now, and usplain2019-11-09T06:22:31-08:00I grew up in the Gulf of Maine region, where my relatives raised me to know that the land can feed us. My life work has been motivated by my desire to live accountably to that relationship, and to support land relationships for all people.
I use my training as an artist and social scientist (with degrees in Visual and Environmental Studies and Geography) to teach courses on land relationships -- and to support public education programs through community partnerships such as the Art of Food in Frogtown and Rondo.
I also write articles and creative works exploring land relationships, especially about urban food land uses. I am very interested in how growing food near where people live can help people share strategies for re-building food systems to rely less on practices that exploit people and land, and that instead build health, community wealth, robust ecosystems, and social healing. Nourishment comes from many sources and is needed and shared in many ways: acknowledging and repairing history, traumas, mistakes, colonialism, exploitation
[maps of expanding dairy / images of STRESS: labor, environments, loss, fear]
white patriarchy holding onto the milk facing twilight