Thursday, March 5, 2026

Whiteness and Farmers Markets - Thoughts

  Farmers markets are very popular as they are seen to be more “sustainable” than the corporate grocery stores. They are places where you feel like you are supporting your community. Most of the time, the demographic of the people that are frequenting these places is liberals with large amounts of money. The high prices found at the farmers' market are not just about the higher costs associated with organic farming, but rather a barrier to entry. This keeps the farmers' market as a white and wealthy place. Farmers' markets also romanticize the idea of an independent farmer. This idea ignores the reality of agricultural labor (commonly in California), which is overwhelmingly performed by minorities and people of color. These groups of people are often absent from the social and management faces of these markets.

The “habit of whiteness” is very convicting. When someone buys a bunch of organic foods, they feel as though they are “doing good” or “doing their part”. However, low-income residents of the area and people of color are unable to access this commodity. A lot of the managers of these markets have an idea of what the “community” should look like. This image is typically white-centric. This creates a feedback loop where the market stays white because it feels white. It feels white because it only attracts those who fit within that idea. 

This dominance is challenged at times with individual solidarity and institutional efforts. Some markets are beginning to accept SNAP or EBT benefits to support the general community as well as searching out a more diverse vendor base. Individuals within the community are also completing acts of solidarity and anti-racism when individuals of those groups enter the market. We need to make these spaces inclusive if we want to move past the performance of just “doing good”. We need to look at who is excluded from the space through signage, the “vibe” of the market, music, and the prices.


2 comments:

Jaelyn Merced said...

I found it really upsetting to find out more about how people of color/minorities contributions to farms are ignored and in a way hidden. It's extremely disrespectful to the people working hard to support the rest of us. I do agree that inclusivity is key towards the advancement of farmers markets and making them accessible for everyone!

Caylee Hansel said...

I appreciate you wording the issue as a “barrier to entry,” because that is exactly what it is: an economic, societal barrier. I also appreciated how you pointed out the feedback loop, and pattern, looked at in the study. I also find myself viewing organic foods or farmers markets as “better environmentally and/or morally” or “healthier for myself and the planet.” It is really important, as you said, to not accept these thoughts as “enough,” but acknowledge the communities who do not have the same grace of access. Ignorance, whether purposefully or not, perpetuates the unhealthy, positive feedback cycle, instead of fueling change towards a more equal system.

Whiteness and Farmers Markets

  One idea that stood out to me in the article by Alison Hope Alkon and Christie Grace McCullen is that  farmers  markets can unintentionall...