Capitalist Pigs: Pigs, Pork, and Power in America

Author:   J.L. Anderson
Publisher:   West Virginia University Press
ISBN:  

9781946684721


Pages:   300
Publication Date:   28 February 2019
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Capitalist Pigs: Pigs, Pork, and Power in America


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Overview

Pigs are everywhere in United States history. They cleared frontiers and built cities (notably Cincinnati, once known as Porkopolis), served as an early form of welfare, and were at the center of two nineteenth-century “pig wars.” American pork fed the hemisphere; lard literally greased the wheels of capitalism. J. L. Anderson has written an ambitious history of pigs and pig products from the Columbian exchange to the present, emphasizing critical stories of production, consumption, and waste in American history. He examines different cultural assumptions about pigs to provide a window into the nation’s regional, racial, and class fault lines, and maps where pigs are (and are not) to reveal a deep history of the American landscape. A contribution to American history, food studies, agricultural history, and animal studies, Capitalist Pigs is an accessible, deeply researched, and often surprising portrait of one of the planet’s most consequential interspecies relationships.

Full Product Details

Author:   J.L. Anderson
Publisher:   West Virginia University Press
Imprint:   West Virginia University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 19.10cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 23.50cm
Weight:   0.938kg
ISBN:  

9781946684721


ISBN 10:   1946684724
Pages:   300
Publication Date:   28 February 2019
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Reviews

A sweeping history of pigs in the United States from before the arrival of Europeans to today. In Anderson's clear, brisk, and clever history, these animals appear as wild beasts roaming forests, domesticates in farm pens, commodities in railcars, corpses on slaughterhouse hooks, meat at the ends of butchers' knives, consumer products in Walmart coolers, nourishment in human stomachs, and as transplanted hearts thumping away in human chests. It's fun to read. James C. Giesen, author of Boll Weevil Blues: Cotton, Myth, and Power in the American South Anderson delivers the most thorough account of American pigs ever written, a book packed with fascinating detail on where pigs lived (forests, farmyards, city streets), what they ate (nuts, corn, garbage, the corpses of Civil War soldiers), and how scientists transformed their bodies and their lives to meet the relentless demands of the market. This is the story of how pigs made America, and how America remade the pig. Mark Essig, author of Lesser Beasts: A Snout-to-Tail History of the Humble Pig In the vein of William Cronon's Nature's Metropolis, this is a meaty, accessible, and clear-eyed agricultural history. Booklist Anderson's investigation is thorough, focusing on economic and social impacts, and, when appropriate, unflinching. Publishers Weekly J. L. Anderson's Capitalist Pigs is a thorough and engaging examination of swine in US agriculture, culture, and history. It will be a standard to judge later histories of Americans' relationships with agricultural livestock and domestic animals. Leo Landis, State Curator, State Historical Society of Iowa and the Bacon Professor J.L. Anderson weaves a complex story about the hog industry's impact on the growth of an economy and offers insight into the important role the agriculture and food industry played in the building of a nation. You will find yourself surprised by its influence. Tom Vilsack, US Secretary of Agriculture, 2009-2017 A clear and accessible read, beautifully illustrated with paintings, maps, and photographs that demonstrate the prominence of the pig in America. Environmental History


A sweeping history of pigs in the United States from before the arrival of Europeans to today. In Anderson's clear, brisk, and clever history, these animals appear as wild beasts roaming forests, domesticates in farm pens, commodities in railcars, corpses on slaughterhouse hooks, meat at the ends of butchers' knives, consumer products in Walmart coolers, nourishment in human stomachs, and as transplanted hearts thumping away in human chests. It's fun to read. James C. Giesen, author of Boll Weevil Blues: Cotton, Myth, and Power in the American South


A sweeping history of pigs in the United States from before the arrival of Europeans to today. In Anderson's clear, brisk, and clever history, these animals appear as wild beasts roaming forests, domesticates in farm pens, commodities in railcars, corpses on slaughterhouse hooks, meat at the ends of butchers' knives, consumer products in Walmart coolers, nourishment in human stomachs, and as transplanted hearts thumping away in human chests. It's fun to read. James C. Giesen, author of Boll Weevil Blues: Cotton, Myth, and Power in the American South J.L. Anderson weaves a complex story about the hog industry's impact on the growth of an economy and offers insight into the important role the agriculture and food industry played in the building of a nation. You will find yourself surprised by its influence. Tom Vilsack, US Secretary of Agriculture, 2009-2017 Anderson delivers the most thorough account of American pigs ever written, a book packed with fascinating detail on where pigs lived (forests, farmyards, city streets), what they ate (nuts, corn, garbage, the corpses of Civil War soldiers), and how scientists transformed their bodies and their lives to meet the relentless demands of the market. This is the story of how pigs made America, and how America remade the pig. Mark Essig, author of Lesser Beasts: A Snout-to-Tail History of the Humble Pig


"​""A sweeping history of pigs in the United States from before the arrival of Europeans to today. In Anderson's clear, brisk, and clever history, these animals appear as wild beasts roaming forests, domesticates in farm pens, commodities in railcars, corpses on slaughterhouse hooks, meat at the ends of butchers' knives, consumer products in Walmart coolers, nourishment in human stomachs, and as transplanted hearts thumping away in human chests. It's fun to read."" James C. Giesen, author of Boll Weevil Blues: Cotton, Myth, and Power in the American South ""Anderson delivers the most thorough account of American pigs ever written, a book packed with fascinating detail on where pigs lived (forests, farmyards, city streets), what they ate (nuts, corn, garbage, the corpses of Civil War soldiers), and how scientists transformed their bodies and their lives to meet the relentless demands of the market. This is the story of how pigs made America, and how America remade the pig."" Mark Essig, author of Lesser Beasts: A Snout-to-Tail History of the Humble Pig ""In the vein of William Cronon's Nature's Metropolis, this is a meaty, accessible, and clear-eyed agricultural history."" Booklist ""Anderson's investigation is thorough, focusing on economic and social impacts, and, when appropriate, unflinching."" Publishers Weekly ""J. L. Anderson's Capitalist Pigs is a thorough and engaging examination of swine in US agriculture, culture, and history. It will be a standard to judge later histories of Americans' relationships with agricultural livestock and domestic animals."" Leo Landis, State Curator, State Historical Society of Iowa and ""the Bacon Professor"" ""J.L. Anderson weaves a complex story about the hog industry's impact on the growth of an economy and offers insight into the important role the agriculture and food industry played in the building of a nation. You will find yourself surprised by its influence."" Tom Vilsack, US Secretary of Agriculture, 2009-2017​ ""A clear and accessible read, beautifully illustrated with paintings, maps, and photographs that demonstrate the prominence of the pig in America."" Environmental History"


A sweeping history of pigs in the United States from before the arrival of Europeans to today. In Anderson's clear, brisk, and clever history, these animals appear as wild beasts roaming forests, domesticates in farm pens, commodities in railcars, corpses on slaughterhouse hooks, meat at the ends of butchers' knives, consumer products in Walmart coolers, nourishment in human stomachs, and as transplanted hearts thumping away in human chests. It's fun to read. James C. Giesen, author of Boll Weevil Blues: Cotton, Myth, and Power in the American South J. L. Anderson's Capitalist Pigs is a thorough and engaging examination of swine in US agriculture, culture, and history. It will be a standard to judge later histories of Americans' relationships with agricultural livestock and domestic animals. Leo Landis, State Curator, State Historical Society of Iowa and the Bacon Professor J.L. Anderson weaves a complex story about the hog industry's impact on the growth of an economy and offers insight into the important role the agriculture and food industry played in the building of a nation. You will find yourself surprised by its influence. Tom Vilsack, US Secretary of Agriculture, 2009-2017 In the vein of William Cronon's Nature's Metropolis, this is a meaty, accessible, and clear-eyed agricultural history. Booklist Anderson's investigation is thorough, focusing on economic and social impacts, and, when appropriate, unflinching. Publishers Weekly Anderson delivers the most thorough account of American pigs ever written, a book packed with fascinating detail on where pigs lived (forests, farmyards, city streets), what they ate (nuts, corn, garbage, the corpses of Civil War soldiers), and how scientists transformed their bodies and their lives to meet the relentless demands of the market. This is the story of how pigs made America, and how America remade the pig. Mark Essig, author of Lesser Beasts: A Snout-to-Tail History of the Humble Pig


J. L. Anderson's Capitalist Pigs is a thorough and engaging examination of swine in US agriculture, culture, and history. It will be a standard to judge later histories of Americans' relationships with agricultural livestock and domestic animals. Leo Landis, State Curator, State Historical Society of Iowa and the Bacon Professor A sweeping history of pigs in the United States from before the arrival of Europeans to today. In Anderson's clear, brisk, and clever history, these animals appear as wild beasts roaming forests, domesticates in farm pens, commodities in railcars, corpses on slaughterhouse hooks, meat at the ends of butchers' knives, consumer products in Walmart coolers, nourishment in human stomachs, and as transplanted hearts thumping away in human chests. It's fun to read. James C. Giesen, author of Boll Weevil Blues: Cotton, Myth, and Power in the American South J.L. Anderson weaves a complex story about the hog industry's impact on the growth of an economy and offers insight into the important role the agriculture and food industry played in the building of a nation. You will find yourself surprised by its influence. Tom Vilsack, US Secretary of Agriculture, 2009-2017 Anderson delivers the most thorough account of American pigs ever written, a book packed with fascinating detail on where pigs lived (forests, farmyards, city streets), what they ate (nuts, corn, garbage, the corpses of Civil War soldiers), and how scientists transformed their bodies and their lives to meet the relentless demands of the market. This is the story of how pigs made America, and how America remade the pig. Mark Essig, author of Lesser Beasts: A Snout-to-Tail History of the Humble Pig


Author Information

J. L. Anderson teaches history at Mount Royal University in Calgary, Alberta. Prior to his academic appointment, he was a museum educator and administrator, cultivating a personal and professional interest in swine at the agricultural museums where he worked. Anderson is currently president of the Agricultural History Society.

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