The document discusses how food shapes our world and how we can use food to rethink how we live in a more sustainable way. It argues that our disconnect from food is a result of industrialization but is no longer viable given population growth, climate change, and other issues. The term "sitopia" is introduced to describe using food as a design tool to rethink the urban-rural relationship and address questions about balancing with nature, building resilient societies, and designing sustainable cities and ways of living. Food can be a connector to gain insights and change structures of our lives for the better.
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Carolyn Steel
1. Sitopia: how food can save the world
Abstract of talk for the CUIMPB-Centre Ernest Lluch, Barcelona on 22-02-21 by Carolyn Steel
We live in a world shaped by food. Our cities and hinterlands were shaped by it. Our daily routines are structured around it.
Politics and economics are driven by it. Our ecological footprint is determined by it. Our sense of identity is inseparable from it.
Our survival depends on it. How, then, have we come to consider food as just another commodity: something to be made as
cheap and convenient as possible, while we get on with the 'more important' things in life? Our profound disconnection with
food, our most vital necessity, is the curious legacy of industrialisation. It is also the symptom of a way of life we can no longer
afford. With a rapidly increasing global population, urbanisation, climate change and peak oil, we face a ‘Neo-Geographical
Age’, in which our way of life and use of resources will matter as much to us as they did to our ancient ancestors.
Food is not only the most powerful human agent shaping our world, but is nevertheless one that we can harness as a design
tool to rethink how we live and create new dwelling models. My term sitopia (food-place) describes this approach (from the
Greek sitos + topos, place). The primary focus of sitopia is to rethink the urban-rural relationship, the basic dynamic of human
civilisation. We live in cities, but if our food comes from somewhere else, to what extent do we really dwell there? I call this
dilemma the ‘urban paradox’ – the fact that cities could not exist without countryside, yet few of us living in cities today can see
the landscapes that feed us.
Today, we urgently need to rethink the way we live – and food is a powerful medium through which to do that. By thinking and
acting through food, we can address such questions as how to rebalance our relationship with nature, how to build more
resilient, equitable societies, how and where to build cities, how we should feed and live in them, and how we might ‘post-fit’
existing ones to make them more sustainable. Most importantly, we can use food to reimagine our idea of a good life. Food is
the great connector: by thinking, not just about food, but through it, we can gain vital insights into the structures of our lives, and
change them for the better.
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