“A banquet for all the world”: democracy and consumerism in Disney’s Food Will Win the War
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
8-8-2018
Abstract
This essay considers Food Will Win the War, an animated short made early in World War II by Disney Studios for the United States Department of Agriculture. Through a fantastical catalogue of hyperbolic images, the film shows how the mass production of American agriculture becomes the first wave of a new American-style consumerism of plenty that will transform the social order. The analysis blends contemporary theories of affective politics to show Food Will Win the War as a threshold text, revealing the post-war economy at its formation. Using food as a symbolic field, this film ultimately links the endless expansion of consumer desire to national identity and global colonization.
Publication Source (Journal or Book title)
Critical Studies in Media Communication
First Page
363
Last Page
375
Recommended Citation
Grey, S. (2018). “A banquet for all the world”: democracy and consumerism in Disney’s Food Will Win the War. Critical Studies in Media Communication, 35 (4), 363-375. https://doi.org/10.1080/15295036.2018.1468566