Frances Moore Lappé
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Frances Moore Lappé (born February 10 1944) is a noted social change and democracy activist, and the author of 16 books, including the three-million-copy bestseller, Diet for a Small Planet (originally published in 1971).
[edit] Biography
Lappé was born in 1944 in Pendleton, Oregon to John and Ina Moore and grew up in Fort Worth, Texas. After graduating from Earlham College in 1966, she married toxicologist and environmentalist Dr. Marc Lappé in 1967. They had two children, Anthony and Anna Lappé. They divorced in 1977. She briefly attended University of California at Berkeley for graduate studies in social work.
Throught her works Lappé has argued that global hunger and poverty are not due to lack of food and other goods but to a widespread framework of scarcity or "lack.". She has posited that our current "thin democracy" creates a maldistribution of power that inevitably creates waste and a scarcity of the essentials sustainable living.
Lappé makes the radical argument that what she calls "living democracy," ie.not only what we do in the voting booth but through our daily choices of what we buy and how we live, provides a mental and behavioral framework of goods and goodness that is aligned with our basic human nature. She believes that only by "living democracy can we effectively solve the today's social and environmental crises.
Lappé began her writing career early in life. She first gained prominence in the early 1970s with the publication of her book Diet for a Small Planet, which has sold several million copies.
In 1975, with Joseph Collins she launched the California-based Institute for Food and Development Policy (Food First) to educate Americans about the causes of world hunger. In 1990,
Lappé co-founded the Center for Living Democracy in 1990, a 10-year initiative to accelerate the spread of democratic innovations in which regular citizens contribute to problem solving. She served as founding editor of the Center’s American News Service (1995-2000), which placed stories of citizen problem-solving in nearly half the nation’s largest newspapers. In 2000 she was a visiting scholar at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
In 2002 Lappé and her daughter Anna established the Small Planet Institute based in Cambridge, Massachusetts a collaborative network for research and popular education to bring democracy to life. With her daughter, she is also co-founder of the Small Planet Fund, channeling resources to democratic social movements worldwide.
Democracy's Edge: Choosing to Save our Country by Bringing Democracy to Life, was released in 2006. This book completed a trilogy which began in 2002 with the 30th anniversary sequel to Diet for a Small Planet, titled Hope's Edge: The Next Diet for a Small Planet, co-written with her daughter, Anna Lappé. Then in 2004 she published with Jeffrey Perkins You Have the Power: Choosing Courage in a Culture of Fear. Among Lappé's other books are World Hunger: Twelve Myths and Rediscovering America's Values.
In September of 2007, the Institute's publishing arm, Small Planet Media, released Lappé's newest book, Getting a Grip: Clarity, Creativity, & Courage in a World Gone Mad, which highlights radically new ways of thinking about fear, power, democracy, and hope itself.
Lappé is a founding Counselor of the Hamburg based World Future Council, and on the Adviaory Council of the Union of Concerned Scientists. She a a Contributing Editor to YES Magazine and on the Board of Directors of the People-Centered Development Forum and serves as a member of the International Commission on the Future of Food and Agriculture,
Lappé's articles and opinion pieces have appeared in publications as diverse as The New York Times, O Magazine, and Christian Century. Her television and radio appearances have included a PBS special with Bill Moyers, the Today Show, CBS Radio, and National Public Radio.
Lappe has received 17 honorary doctorates from distinguished institutions, including the University of Michigan, Kenyon College, Allegheny College Lewis and Clark College and Grinell College.. In 1987 in Sweden, Lappé became the fourth American to receive the Right Livelihood Award sometimes called the Alternative Nobel. . In 2003 she received the Rachel Carson Award from the National Nutritional Foods Association. She is one of twelve living "women who words have changed the world" selected by the Women's National Book Association.
Historian Howard Zinn writes: “A small number of people in every generation are forerunners, in thought, action, spirit, who swerve past the barriers of greed and power to hold a torch high for the rest of us. Lappé is one of those.” The Washington Post says: “Some of the twentieth century’s most vibrant activist thinkers have been American women – Margaret Mead, Jeanette Rankin, Barbara Ward, Dorothy Day – who took it upon themselves to pump life into basic truths. Frances Moore Lappé is among them."
[edit] Writings
- Diet for a Small Planet, Ballantine Books, 1971, 1975, 1982, 1991. ISBN 0345023781
- Food First: Beyond the Myth of Scarcity (with Joseph Collins), Houghton Mifflin, 1977, Ballantine Books, 1979.
- What To Do After You Turn Off the T.V., Ballantine Books, 1985.
- World Hunger: Twelve Myths (with Joseph Collins), Grove Press, 1986, 1998.
- Rediscovering America's Values, Ballantine Books, 1989
- The Quickening of America: Rebuilding Our Nation, Remaking Our Lives (with Paul Martin Du Bois), Jossey-Bass, 1994.
- Hope’s Edge: The Next Diet for a Small Planet (with Anna Lappé), Tarcher/Penguin, 2002.
- You Have the Power: Choosing Courage in a Culture of Fear (with Jeffrey Perkins), Tarcher/Penguin, 2004.
- Democracy's Edge: Choosing to Save Our Country by Bringing Democracy to Life, Jossey-Bass, 2005.
- Getting A Grip: Clarity, Creativity and Courage in a World Gone Mad, Small Planet Media, 2007.
[edit] External links
- Small Planet Institute
- Getting a Grip website
- Big Picture TV Free video clips of Frances Moore Lappé
- Right Livelihood Award website
| Persondata | |
|---|---|
| NAME | Lappé, Frances Moore |
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES | |
| SHORT DESCRIPTION | activist against world hunger |
| DATE OF BIRTH | 10 February 1944 |
| PLACE OF BIRTH | Pendleton, Oregon, U.S. |
| DATE OF DEATH | |
| PLACE OF DEATH | |

