Heather Paxson

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Heather Paxson



Average rating: 3.86 · 104 ratings · 13 reviews · 7 distinct worksSimilar authors
Life of Cheese: Crafting Fo...

3.91 avg rating — 82 ratings — published 2012 — 10 editions
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Fast Food/Slow Food: The Cu...

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3.57 avg rating — 14 ratings — published 2006 — 7 editions
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Making Modern Mothers: Ethi...

3.40 avg rating — 5 ratings — published 2004 — 3 editions
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Eating beside Ourselves: Th...

4.33 avg rating — 3 ratings3 editions
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Making Modern Mothers

liked it 3.00 avg rating — 2 ratings — published 2004
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Making Modern Mothers: Ethi...

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings — published 2004
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(Life of Cheese (California...

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“Kessler depicts his developing intimacy with a handful of dairy goats and offers an enviable glimpse of the pastoral good life. Yet he also cautions, "Wherever the notion of paradise exists, so does the idea that it was lost. Paradise is always in the past." The title Goat Song is a literal rendering of the Greek word traghoudhia, tragedy. Reading it, I was reminded of Leo Marx's analysis of Thoreau's Walden. In The Machine in the Garden, Marx names Thoreau a tragic, if complex pastoralist. After failing to make an agrarian living raising beans for commercial trade (although his intent was always more allegorical than pecuniary), Thoreau ends Walden by replacing the pastoral idea where it originated: in literature. Paradise, Marx concludes, is not ultimately to be found at Walden Pond; it is to be found in the pages of Walden.”
Heather Paxson, Life of Cheese: Crafting Food and Value in America (California Studies in Food and Culture)

“In insisting that personal habit and political action be one and the same, absolutist moralizing limits the possibilities of both.”
Heather Paxson, Life of Cheese: Crafting Food and Value in America (California Studies in Food and Culture)



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