"A necessary and multi-perspective analysis of contemporary food banks in the UK. A mandatory reading for all academic scholars and public activists interested in food poverty in a broader cultural context."Stefan Selke, Furtwangen University, Germany"Through his critical and discursive approach, Chris Möller invites us to "think differently" about food charity. His incisive critique of our everyday assumptions about the psychology of both food poverty and food charity provides a rigorous theoretical analysis that is grounded in and illustrated by examples of his own research. Chris’s own reflections on his research experience, woven through his accounts of data collection, importantly personalise the political issues he raises. This book will be an important and timely resource for critical scholars of food poverty and food charity in psychology, sociology and related disciplines."Viv Burr, University of Huddersfield, UK"In this book, Chris Möller explains exceptionally well why a political and discursive approach is needed to consider food banks in terms of the ‘psychologisation’ of poverty, the spectacle of food banks and why food banks are actually part of a problem of neoliberalism societies. Read it and then consider political practice and forms of social action to create social change in the world."Alex Bridger, University of Huddersfield, UK