Describing livestock raised on corn feed, or used stereotypically to describe wholesome, rural, or unsophisticated Midwestern people.
Compound of 'corn' (Old English 'corn') and 'fed' (Old English 'foedan'). The agricultural sense dates to the 1800s; the stereotypical sense emerged in the 1900s.
The term reveals American regional stereotypes—'cornfed' became slang for Midwest wholesomeness partly because the Corn Belt literally feeds huge amounts of corn to cattle and pigs there!
Rural/agricultural coding historically feminized domestic food production while crediting male ownership. 'Cornfed' suggests sturdy, unsophisticated femininity—contrast with 'wholesome' applied to men.
Use neutrally to describe agricultural diet/origin without implying gender traits or sophistication judgments.
["from agricultural background","farm-raised","rural-sourced"]
Women farmers and agricultural laborers—particularly immigrant and Indigenous women—historically uncredited for crop cultivation and food systems expertise.
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