Description

Book Synopsis
Alex Blanchette explores how the daily lives of a Midwestern town that is home to a massive pork complex were reorganized around the life and death cycles of pigs while using the factory farm as a way to detail the state of contemporary American industrial capitalism.

Trade Review
Porkopolis is a rigorous and insightful ethnography of food production that connects the politics of labor to ambitious theorizations of political economy and biopolitical governance. Beautifully written and highly accessible, Porkopolis is a field-defining work in animal studies, the anthropology of labor, and food studies. An outstanding book.” -- Gabriel N. Rosenberg, author of * The 4-H Harvest: Sexuality and the State in Rural America *
“In Porkopolis, the industrial pig is not just vertically integrated; it is pervasive, conditioning hog and human bodies and saturating workers' social lives and living spaces. Exquisitely researched and indelibly written, Alex Blanchette's arresting ethnography challenges us to see industrial meat as a new biopolitical regime, the next chapter in capitalism's quest to dominate nature by standardizing life.” -- Heather Paxson, author of * The Life of Cheese: Crafting Food and Value in America *

“As a human-animal researcher, I found this book exciting in its examination of how labor and class shapes human nonhuman entanglement in the industrial setting, and the novel employment of multispecies sensibilities to offer an alternative perspective on the factory farm. Porkopolis might also be read as a twenty-first century world-making process of domestication, radically co-shaping environments, pigs, humans, and other species in the process.”

-- Paul G. Keil * Anthropology Book Forum *
"What is remarkable about Porkopolis is that Blanchette never makes the predictable point but instead uses his thorough ethnography to question many of the taken-for-granted assumptions both popular media and the scholarly literature have made about factory farms. In the process, he has generated the beginning steps toward a new approach toward understanding the relations between industrial forms of capitalism and nature." -- Ilana Gershon * Current Anthropology *
"The clarity and analytical power of Porkopolis are impressive achievements. . . . It is not surprising to learn that Blanchette’s peers consider him one of the finest ethnographers of his generation. The book is crafted with a perspicacity and empathy reminiscent of Munro’s short stories." -- Troy Vettese * Boston Review *
"An even-handed exploration of an issue usually dominated by extremes. . . . That said, even Blanchette’s moral generosity and even-handed treatment of the pork industry cannot powder and perfume the everyday horrors contained within. . . . Blanchette may not have set out to write an argument for de-industrializing pigs, but he achieved it." -- Jennifer Graham * The Hippo *
"The book obliges the thoughtful reader to ponder how this remarkable departure from normal biological life could ever have come about—all for the sake of cheap meat and profit—and what we might need to do (if ever we could) about changing it. Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates. Graduate students, faculty, and professionals." -- J. A. Mather * Choice *
Porkopolis is very well written, powerful, and provocative and is an exceptionally insightful look at industrial capitalism through the lens of human–animal relations. It offers a truly unique perspective into the world that industrial farming has made and remade.” -- Steve Striffler * American Anthropologist *

Porkopolis is a triumph. It is exceptionally readable and engaging in spite of the gravity of its subject matter. It is also creative and challenging in the most haunting and curious ways.”

-- Claire Bunschoten * Social Text *
“Blanchette’s ethnography ... demonstrates the ways in which the modern pork industry has reshaped the rural American workforce as well as economic and social relationships.... Porkopolis is a masterful piece of multi-sited research.” -- Jon Wolseth * American Ethnologist *
“Alex Blanchette’s Porkopolis is an incredible ethnographic achievement.... The book’s commitment to an ambitious theoretical project, its inviting prose that balances precision and readability, and its sharply described ethnographic insights all work flawlessly.” -- Andrea Rissing and Nicholas C. Kawa * Culture, Agriculture, Food and Environment *
“There are many angles from which to approach Alex Blanchette’s sweeping, paradigm defining and redefining, and prescient ethnography.... Porkopolis will assuredly become essential reading in many areas of anthropology.” -- Carolyn Barnes and Peter Benson * Anthropological Quarterly *
"The pig’s body is shaped by the market and the prices of its various parts. But more shockingly, as Blanchette argues, much the same is true of the bodies of the workers sucked into the maw of this gigantic meat machine. It would be hard to find a more compelling critique of contemporary capitalist exploitation of what was once part of the natural world." -- John Dupré * Los Angeles Review of Books *
Porkopolis provides a substantial and nuanced explanation of industrialized pork production that calls into question the collective societal energy invested into life-forms best suited for capitalist extraction. . . . Blanchette makes numerous contributions to sociology, anthropology, and more-than-human geographies.” -- Michaela Hoffelmeyer * Agriculture and Human Values *

Table of Contents
List of Illustrations vii
Acknowledgments ix
Preface. Watching Hogs Watch Workers xiii
A Note on Photography xvii
Introduction. The "Factory" Farm 1
Part I. Boar
1. The Dover Flies 33
2. The Herd: Intimate Biosecurity and Posthuman Labor 45
Part II. Sow
3. Somos Puercos 73
4. Stimulation: Instincts in Production 89
Part III. Hog
5. Lutalyse 121
6. Stockperson: Love, Muscles, and the Industrial Runt 137
Part IV. Carcass
7. Miss Wicked 167
8. Biological System: Breaking in at the End of Industrial Time 177
Part V. Viscera
9. Maybe Some Blood, but Mostly Grease 203
10. Lifecycle: On Using All of the Porcine Species 211
Epilogue. The (De-)Industrialization of the World 239
Notes 247
References 265
Index 287

Porkopolis

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    A Hardback by Alex Blanchette

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      View other formats and editions of Porkopolis by Alex Blanchette

      Publisher: Duke University Press
      Publication Date: 08/05/2020
      ISBN13: 9781478007890, 978-1478007890
      ISBN10: 1478007893

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Alex Blanchette explores how the daily lives of a Midwestern town that is home to a massive pork complex were reorganized around the life and death cycles of pigs while using the factory farm as a way to detail the state of contemporary American industrial capitalism.

      Trade Review
      Porkopolis is a rigorous and insightful ethnography of food production that connects the politics of labor to ambitious theorizations of political economy and biopolitical governance. Beautifully written and highly accessible, Porkopolis is a field-defining work in animal studies, the anthropology of labor, and food studies. An outstanding book.” -- Gabriel N. Rosenberg, author of * The 4-H Harvest: Sexuality and the State in Rural America *
      “In Porkopolis, the industrial pig is not just vertically integrated; it is pervasive, conditioning hog and human bodies and saturating workers' social lives and living spaces. Exquisitely researched and indelibly written, Alex Blanchette's arresting ethnography challenges us to see industrial meat as a new biopolitical regime, the next chapter in capitalism's quest to dominate nature by standardizing life.” -- Heather Paxson, author of * The Life of Cheese: Crafting Food and Value in America *

      “As a human-animal researcher, I found this book exciting in its examination of how labor and class shapes human nonhuman entanglement in the industrial setting, and the novel employment of multispecies sensibilities to offer an alternative perspective on the factory farm. Porkopolis might also be read as a twenty-first century world-making process of domestication, radically co-shaping environments, pigs, humans, and other species in the process.”

      -- Paul G. Keil * Anthropology Book Forum *
      "What is remarkable about Porkopolis is that Blanchette never makes the predictable point but instead uses his thorough ethnography to question many of the taken-for-granted assumptions both popular media and the scholarly literature have made about factory farms. In the process, he has generated the beginning steps toward a new approach toward understanding the relations between industrial forms of capitalism and nature." -- Ilana Gershon * Current Anthropology *
      "The clarity and analytical power of Porkopolis are impressive achievements. . . . It is not surprising to learn that Blanchette’s peers consider him one of the finest ethnographers of his generation. The book is crafted with a perspicacity and empathy reminiscent of Munro’s short stories." -- Troy Vettese * Boston Review *
      "An even-handed exploration of an issue usually dominated by extremes. . . . That said, even Blanchette’s moral generosity and even-handed treatment of the pork industry cannot powder and perfume the everyday horrors contained within. . . . Blanchette may not have set out to write an argument for de-industrializing pigs, but he achieved it." -- Jennifer Graham * The Hippo *
      "The book obliges the thoughtful reader to ponder how this remarkable departure from normal biological life could ever have come about—all for the sake of cheap meat and profit—and what we might need to do (if ever we could) about changing it. Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates. Graduate students, faculty, and professionals." -- J. A. Mather * Choice *
      Porkopolis is very well written, powerful, and provocative and is an exceptionally insightful look at industrial capitalism through the lens of human–animal relations. It offers a truly unique perspective into the world that industrial farming has made and remade.” -- Steve Striffler * American Anthropologist *

      Porkopolis is a triumph. It is exceptionally readable and engaging in spite of the gravity of its subject matter. It is also creative and challenging in the most haunting and curious ways.”

      -- Claire Bunschoten * Social Text *
      “Blanchette’s ethnography ... demonstrates the ways in which the modern pork industry has reshaped the rural American workforce as well as economic and social relationships.... Porkopolis is a masterful piece of multi-sited research.” -- Jon Wolseth * American Ethnologist *
      “Alex Blanchette’s Porkopolis is an incredible ethnographic achievement.... The book’s commitment to an ambitious theoretical project, its inviting prose that balances precision and readability, and its sharply described ethnographic insights all work flawlessly.” -- Andrea Rissing and Nicholas C. Kawa * Culture, Agriculture, Food and Environment *
      “There are many angles from which to approach Alex Blanchette’s sweeping, paradigm defining and redefining, and prescient ethnography.... Porkopolis will assuredly become essential reading in many areas of anthropology.” -- Carolyn Barnes and Peter Benson * Anthropological Quarterly *
      "The pig’s body is shaped by the market and the prices of its various parts. But more shockingly, as Blanchette argues, much the same is true of the bodies of the workers sucked into the maw of this gigantic meat machine. It would be hard to find a more compelling critique of contemporary capitalist exploitation of what was once part of the natural world." -- John Dupré * Los Angeles Review of Books *
      Porkopolis provides a substantial and nuanced explanation of industrialized pork production that calls into question the collective societal energy invested into life-forms best suited for capitalist extraction. . . . Blanchette makes numerous contributions to sociology, anthropology, and more-than-human geographies.” -- Michaela Hoffelmeyer * Agriculture and Human Values *

      Table of Contents
      List of Illustrations vii
      Acknowledgments ix
      Preface. Watching Hogs Watch Workers xiii
      A Note on Photography xvii
      Introduction. The "Factory" Farm 1
      Part I. Boar
      1. The Dover Flies 33
      2. The Herd: Intimate Biosecurity and Posthuman Labor 45
      Part II. Sow
      3. Somos Puercos 73
      4. Stimulation: Instincts in Production 89
      Part III. Hog
      5. Lutalyse 121
      6. Stockperson: Love, Muscles, and the Industrial Runt 137
      Part IV. Carcass
      7. Miss Wicked 167
      8. Biological System: Breaking in at the End of Industrial Time 177
      Part V. Viscera
      9. Maybe Some Blood, but Mostly Grease 203
      10. Lifecycle: On Using All of the Porcine Species 211
      Epilogue. The (De-)Industrialization of the World 239
      Notes 247
      References 265
      Index 287

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