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“When Does It Stop Being Peanut Butter?”: FDA Food Standards of Identity, Ruth Desmond, and the Shifting Politics of Consumer Activism, 1960s–1970s
Author(s) -
Angie Boyce
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
technology and culture
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.389
H-Index - 34
eISSN - 1097-3729
pISSN - 0040-165X
DOI - 10.1353/tech.2016.0016
Subject(s) - grassroots , identity (music) , politics , legislature , negotiation , government (linguistics) , consumption (sociology) , peanut butter , sociology , political science , public administration , law , social science , aesthetics , philosophy , linguistics , chemistry , food science
This article uses a historical controversy over the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's standard of identity for peanut butter as a site for investigating three topics of high importance for historians of technology, consumption, and food activism: how new industrial food-processing technologies have become regulatory problems; how government, industry, and consumer actors negotiate standards development; and how laypeople try to shape technological artifacts in spaces dominated by experts. It examines the trajectory of consumer activist Ruth Desmond, co-founder of the organization the Federation of Homemakers. By following Desmond's evolving strategies, the article shows how the broader currents of the 1960s-70s consumer movement played out in a particular case. Initially Desmond used a traditional style that heavily emphasized her gendered identity, working within a grassroots organization to promote legislative and regulatory reforms. Later, she moved to a more modern advocacy approach, using adversarial legal methods to fight for consumer protections.

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