Speed kills. Facing our modern world’s addictions to capitalist efficiencies, speedy technologies, and fast food, Caputi here offers an alternative. Arguing for a slow and curvy politics, she draws on the slow food movement to diagnose and remedy our common predicament. How do we attend to one another, to our bodies, and to the health of the world around us? By taking time – time to taste, time to savor, time to learn. Engaging such diverse sources as Shakespeare, the antiwork movement, urban design, and Native American traditions, Caputi’s philosophy encourages a slower, greener, and more embedded life.
— Kennan Ferguson, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Is the American Dream still able to respond to the needs of present day society and also to the dreamsof future generations? Or perhaps we have to pursue a new form of humanism that takes care of nature and human relationships, and that doesn't only link progress to technological innovations? These are all questions that Mary Caputi tries to answer in her book. She does that by recalling important characters from mythology, literature, and religion. And by asking the help of a special red snail, and that movement that it represents.
— Carlo Petrini, Founder, International Slow Food Movement