Diverging temporalities of care work on urban farms: negotiating history, responsibility, and productivity in Lithuania

Collection:
Mokslo publikacijos / Scientific publications
Document Type:
Straipsnis / Article
Language:
Anglų kalba / English
Title:
Diverging temporalities of care work on urban farms: negotiating history, responsibility, and productivity in Lithuania
In the Journal:
Geoforum. 2020, 115, p. 44-53
Keywords:
LT
Vilnius. Vilniaus kraštas (Vilnius region); Lietuva (Lithuania); Miestai ir miesteliai / Cities and towns; Žemės ūkis / Agriculture.
Summary / Abstract:

LTReikšminiai žodžiai: Laikinumas; Miesto ūkininkavimas; Post-socializmas; Rytų Europos šalys (Eastern Europe states); Žemės ūkio priežiūra; Agricultural care; Eastern Europe; Post-socialism; Temporality; Urban farming.

ENWhile scholars have developed a nuanced understanding of agriculture as a form of care, the temporal organization of farming practices has received little consideration. Focusing on how farmers organize and experience agriculture, we track diverging approaches to care work on urban farms in Vilnius, Lithuania. Our ethnographic fieldwork and interviews show how Lithuanian urban farmers are struggling to reconcile the civic ideals of the global urban farming movement with their historical understandings of care for specific plants and the land. Whereas the older generation views farming as kinship-based individualized work focusing on particular plants and garden ecologies, the younger generation approaches it as a way to unwind, mediate, and build a community. These different perspectives on farming translate into divergent temporalities of care in which productivist goals rooted in socialist self-provisioning practices and embodied in orderly landscapes encounter new trends of agricultural care manifested in the natural aesthetics of the farms. We examine dynamic tensions between the two farming modalities by linking them to different understandings of moral commitments and responsibilities for plants and land. Through the lens of temporality, we also show how these divergent care modes are themselves grounded in gender inequalities reproduced on the farms and enabled by by the welfare state institutions, including maternity leave and retirement policies. [From the publication]

DOI:
10.1016/j.geoforum.2020.06.006
ISSN:
0016-7185
Related Publications:
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https://www.lituanistika.lt/content/91001
Updated:
2022-01-18 11:29:23
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