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E-grāmata: Future of Meat Without Animals

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Plant-based and cell-cultured meat, milk, and egg producers aim to replace industrial food production with animal-free fare that tastes better, costs less, and requires a fraction of the energy inputs. These products are no longer relegated to niche markets for ethical vegetarians, but are heavily funded by private investors betting on meat without animals as mass-market, environmentally feasible alternatives that can be scaled for a growing global population.

This volume examines conceptual and cultural opportunities, entanglements, and pitfalls in moving global meat, egg, and dairy consumption toward these animal-free options. Beyond surface tensions of meatless meat and animal-free flesh, deeper conflicts proliferate around naturalized accounts of human identity and meat consumption, as well as the linkage of protein with colonial power and gender oppression. What visions and technologies can disrupt modern agriculture? What economic and marketing channels are required to scale these products? What beings and ecosystems remain implicated in a livestock-free food system?

A future of meat without animals invites adjustments on the plate, but it also inspires renewed habits of mind as well as life-affirming innovations capable of nourishing the contours of our future selves. This book illuminates material and philosophical complexities that will shape the character of our future/s of food.

Recenzijas

Are we on the edge of a future without meat from animals?  For the past 45 years, I've been waiting for that future.  It's not here yet, but this collection of diverse essays gives reason to hope that - despite the major obstacles still standing in the way - it is not far away.  -- Peter Singer, author of Animal Liberation The Future of Meat Without Animals raises vital questions at a moment poised between a harmful and unsustainable industrial animal agriculture and growing interest in plant-based and cultured alternatives to meat, milk, eggs, and cheese. It provides consumers, activists, and scholars with critical resources and innovative ways of thinking about animals, agriculture, meat, and meaning while calling for the essential deindustrialization of our multispecies relationships. -- Brett Mizelle, Professor of History, California State University, Long Beach How did we end up in this mess? What changes are needed to combat the looming threat of ecocide, induced by animal agriculture? And what are the challenges and potential downfalls that might accompany attempts to implement these changes? These are the questions that a diverse array of independent scholars, animal advocacy workers, CEOs and employees of plant-based and cellular-cultured food companies, and academics ask and attempt to answer in The Future of Meat without Animals. [ ] This book is one that both academics from various disciplines and food producers will appreciate; it offers something of value for everyone who hopes for a future without animal exploitation and agriculture-induced environmental devastation. * Environmental Ethics, Vol. 39, no. 3, 2017 *

List of Figures and Tables
ix
Introduction: In the Blink of an Eye xi
Brianne Donaldson
PART I OUR PAST CANNOT MEAT THE FUTURE
1(96)
Beyond Meat
3(4)
Ethan Brown
1 Towards 2050: The Projected Costs of and Possible Alternatives to Industrial Livestock Production
7(28)
Brian G. Henning
2 An Ethical Consumer Capitalism
35(14)
Steven McMullen
3 The `Vegetable Basket Project': Tracking the Increase of Meat Production and Consumption in China since the 1980s
49(18)
Song Tian
Yao Wang
Mo Zhao
Yuan Gao
4 The Rise of Non-Veg: Meat and Egg Consumption and Production in Contemporary India
67(20)
Ana Bajzelj
Shivani Bothra
5 Seeing Meat without Animals: Attitudes for the Future
87(10)
Adam Wolpa
PART II NOURISHING INNOVATION/S
97(104)
Miyoko's Kitchen: Artisan Vegan Cheese
99(2)
Miyoko Schinner
6 Meat without Flesh
101(10)
Michael Marder
7 The Future of Animals, the Future of Food: Two Organizations Endeavour to Change Public Attitudes and Appetites
111(10)
Jaya Bhumitra
Bruce Friedrich
8 New Harvest: Building the Cellular Agriculture Economy
121(12)
Isha Datar
Erin Kim
Gilonne D'Origny
9 Beyond Happy Meat: The (im)Possibilities of `Humane', `Local' and `Compassionate' Meat
133(22)
Vasile Stanescu
10 The Future of Industrial Agriculture: An Environmental Justice Perspective
155(22)
Joseph A. Tuminello
11 Exploiting Fantasy: Overconformity in Animal Agriculture, Meatless Meat and Animal Ethics
177(24)
Brianne Donaldson
PART III MATTERS OF TASTE
201(80)
Hampton Creek -- Dear You
203(2)
Josh Tetrick
12 Eating Prometheus' Liver: Geoengineered Meat from to the Present 1875
205(12)
Michael Anderson
13 Vegan Soul: Moving beyond (animal) Meat in Black Communities
217(12)
Christopher Carter
14 The Sexual Politics of Meatless Meat: (in)Edible Others and the Myth of Flesh without Sacrifice
229(20)
Rebekah Sinclair
15 Ethical Spectacles and Seitan-Making: Beyond the Sexual Politics of Meat -- A Response to Sinclair
249(8)
Carol J. Adams
16 Making Meaning without Meat: A How-to Guide
257(10)
Aaron Gross
17 Altermobilities: Animals, Mobility and the Future of Meat
267(10)
Matthew Calarco
18 Epilogue
277(4)
Christopher Carter
Appendix A A (non-exhaustive) List of Plant-based and Cultured Meat Food Producers, Funders and Innovation 281(22)
Saadullah Bashir
Appendix B Strategies for Plant-Based Food Producers 303(4)
Bibliography 307(26)
Index 333(4)
About the Contributors 337
Brianne Donaldson is a farmed animal advocate and Assistant Professor of Philosophy and Religious Studies at Monmouth College.

Christopher Carter is Diversity Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of San Diego in the Theology and Religious Studies Department. His research focuses on black and womanist theological ethics, environmental ethics, and animals and religion





Contributors: Brian Henning, Professor of Philosophy and Environmental Studies, Gonzaga University, USA; Ethan Brown, CEO, Beyond Meat; Michael Anderson, Doctoral Candidate, Graduate Theological Union, USA; Jaya Bhumitra, Director of Corporate Outreach, Mercy for Animals; Vasile Stanescu, Assistant Professor of Communication and Theater, Mercer University, USA; Joey Tuminello, Doctoral Candidate and Teaching Fellow, University of North Texas, USA, and Program Coordinator for Farm Forward; Steven McMullen, Assistant Professor of Economics, Hope College, USA; Song Tian, Associate Professor, Institute for History and Philosophy of Science, Beijing Normal University, China; Shivani Bothra, Doctoral Candidate, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand; Christopher Carter, Diversity Postdoctoral Fellow, University of San Diego, USA; Matthew Calarco, Associate Professor of Philosophy, California State University Fullerton, USA; Eileen Crist, Associate Professor of Science and Technology in Society, Virginia Tech University, USA; Michael Marder, Ikerbasque Research Professor of Philosophy, University of Basque Country Vitoria-Gasteiz, Spain; Brianne Donaldson, Assistant Professor of Philosophy and Religious Studies, Monmouth College, USA; Rebekah Sinclair, Doctoral Candidate, University of Oregon, USA; Carol Adams, Author and activist; Aaron Gross, Assistant Professor of Theology and Religious Studies, University of San Diego, USA, and CEO, Farm Forward; Adam Wolpa, Associate Professor of Art and Art History, Calvin College, USA