
Meat, Modernity, and the Rise of the Slaughterhouse - Hardcover
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Availability:Out of StockContributor:Paula Young LeeSeries:Becoming Modern: New Nineteenth-Century StudiesPublish date:7/1/2008Pages:320
Languages:EnglishPublisher:University of New Hampshire PressISBN-13:9781584656982ISBN-10:1584656980UPC:9781584656982Book Category:History, Technology & EngineeringBook Subcategory:Food ScienceSize:9.00 x 5.90 x 1.20 inchesWeight:1.3514Product ID:SCGK6CMNWD
Over the course of the nineteenth century, factory slaughterhouses replaced the hand-slaughter of livestock by individual butchers, who often performed this task in back rooms, letting blood run through streets. A wholly modern invention, the centralized municipal slaughterhouse was a political response to the public's increasing lack of tolerance for "dirty" butchering practices, corresponding to changing norms of social hygiene and fear of meat-borne disease. The slaughterhouse, in Europe and the Americas, rationalized animal slaughter according to capitalist imperatives. What is lost and what is gained when meat becomes a commodity? What do the sites of animal slaughter reveal about our relationship to animals and nature? Essays by the best international scholars come together in this cutting-edge interdisciplinary volume to examine the cultural significance of the slaughterhouse and its impact on modernity. Contributors include: Dorothee Brantz, Kyri Claflin, Jared Day, Roger Horowitz, Lindgren Johnson, Ian MacLachlan, Christopher Otter, Dominic Pacyga, Richard Perren, Jeffrey Pilcher, and Sydney Watts.
Languages:EnglishPublisher:University of New Hampshire PressISBN-13:9781584656982ISBN-10:1584656980UPC:9781584656982Book Category:History, Technology & EngineeringBook Subcategory:Food ScienceSize:9.00 x 5.90 x 1.20 inchesWeight:1.3514Product ID:SCGK6CMNWD
PAULA YOUNG LEE teaches Art and Architectural History at Trinity University in San Antonio, Texas, and is the author of a number of scholarly articles.
Publisher: University of New Hampshire Press
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