Ever been so hungry, you could eat a cat? Strange Country Episode 15 delves into the ways people deal with their hunger as cohosts Beth and Kelly explore the Minnesota Starvation Experiment in the 1940s, designed to discover what happens when people starve to counteract the mass starvation from the world wars. Spoiler alert: people act crazy. Beth shares a tale of solving world hunger by fasting for 30 hours and her fear of tampons, and both Beth and Kelly discover they have no idea what a rutabaga is or why anyone would shoplift one. Bon appetit!
Sources:
elevationweb.org. “The Civilian Public Service Story | Living Peace in a Time of War.” The Civilian Public Service Story | Living Peace in a Time of War, www.civilianpublicservice.org/. Accessed 16 Sept. 2017.
Guetzkow, Harold Steere. “Men and hunger: a psychological manual for relief workers : Guetzkow, Harold Steere : Free Download & Streaming.” Internet Archive, Brethren Publishing House, 25 June 1946, archive.org/details/MenAndHunger.
Media, American Public. American RadioWorks - Battles of Belief, americanradioworks.publicradio.org/features/wwii/a2.html.
“Men Starve in Minnesota.” Life, 30 July 1945, pp. 43–46. Accessed at https://books.google.com/books?id=z0kEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA43&source=gbs_toc_r&cad=2#v=onepage&q&f=false
Miller, Kelsey, et al. “The Starvation Study You Need To Read.” Minnesota Starvation Experiment - Starving Effects, www.refinery29.com/minnesota-starvation-experiment.
Tucker, Todd. The great starvation experiment: Ancel Keys and the men who starved for science. Minneapolis, University of Minnesota Press, 2007.