France is often held up as a bastion of gastronomic refinement and
as a model of artisanal agriculture and husbandry. But French
farming is not at all what it seems. Countering the standard
stories of gastronomy, tourism, and leisure associated with the
French countryside, Venus Bivar portrays French farmers as
hard-nosed businessmen preoccupied with global trade and mass
production. With a focus on both the rise of big agriculture and
the organic movement, Bivar examines the tumult of postwar rural
France, a place fiercely engaged with crucial national and global
developments.
Delving into the intersecting narratives of economic modernization,
the birth of organic farming, the development of a strong
agricultural protest movement, and the rise of environmentalism,
Bivar reveals a movement as preoccupied with maintaining the purity
of the French race as of French food. What emerges is a story of
how French farming conquered the world, bringing with it a set of
ideas about place and purity with a darker origin story than we
might have guessed.