This book grapples with multispecies violent exploitations embedded in corridors of power within the Animal-Industrial Complex (A-IC). The A-IC is a useful framework for understanding how exploitative human-animal relations are central to capitalist relations and profit accumulation. A-IC-related-violence - killing animals for economic gain - has a ripple effect which results in profound consequences for humans as well.
This collection of international scholarship explores topics as varied as how A-IC-related-violence is reproduced and sustained through rapidly changing discursive strategies, ideological architecture, and particular cultural forms that elide and legitimize animal cruelty. Several chapters expose collusion between governments, corporations and academia as central to maintaining dominance of A-IC-related-violence. Other scholars explore the trouble with making the conditions of meat production visible - of de-fetishizing meat commodities. The scholarship critically explores dynamic components of an apparatus that enables A-IC-related-violence and harm but is situated within the capitalist order and charts A-IC-related-violence as the key profit generating practice in select domains of the A-IC.
The book unmasks inherent cruelties in a proliferation of social forms that ultimately reflect a socio-economic system that centralizes capitalist life characterized by endless growth, competitiveness, and profligate consumption. This is essential reading for those engaged in critical criminology, green criminology, violence studies, peace and conflict studies, critical animal studies or animal rights-oriented scholars.
This book grapples with multispecies violent exploitations embedded in corridors of power within the Animal-Industrial Complex (A-IC). The A-IC is a useful framework for understanding how exploitative human-animal relations are central to capitalist relations and profit accumulation.
Recenzijas
Violence, of course, is not only found on the streets, in pubs and taverns, or in domestic/household settings. It is frequently directed at different types of nonhuman animals (NHAs). However, critical criminologists have not been fleet at foot in addressing this major world-wide problem. Thus, this ground-breaking anthology helps fill a major research gap. It is destined to become a classic that should be mandatory reading for all progressive criminologists concerned about the protection and preservation of NHAs. - Dr. Walter S. DeKeseredy, Anna Deane Carlson Endowed Chair of Social Sciences, Director of the Research Center on Violence and Professor of Sociology at West Virginia University
"The volume strikes the right balance between theoretical and applied content and showcases the impressive expertise of scholars across multiple disciplines and countries. This volume will be of interest to many, including (critical) animal studies scholars, ecofeminists, and political economists (to name but a few), and more generally, anyone interested in developing a future where human actions no longer threaten the species and environments around us." - Professor Amy Fitzgerald, University of Windsor
List of Contributors
1. Towards Multi-Species Justice: Unveiling Violence and Exploitation in the
Animal- Industrial Complex
Part I: REPRODUCING A-IC-RELATED-VIOLENCE THROUGH DISCURSIVE STRATEGIES
2. Meat scientists fight back! What the Dublin declaration tells us about the
role of academia in the animal-industrial complex
3. Displaying Compassion to Hide Harms: An Analysis of the Visual
Communication Strategies of the Spanish Animal Industrial Complex
4. But Bacon! The Performative Violence of Anti-Vegan Trolling
Part II: THE TROUBLE WITH VISIBILITY IN UNVEILING COMMODITY FETISHISM
5. The Politics of Smell and The Morality of Sight: Challenging
Slaughterhouses with Glass Walls in Animal Advocacy
6. Beef, Bible, Bullets: Suicidal Cows and the Ecological Imaginings of
Brazil
7. Reexamining the Meatpacking-Methamphetamine Hypothesis
Part III: CULTURAL HEGEMONY OF ANIMAL CRUELTY COMMERCE
8. Selfie Safaris: The Violence of Contemporary Camera Hunting & Trophy Shot
Selfies
9. Following the Cultural Traces of Normalized and Legitimized Violence by
Israeli Kosher Slaughterers toward Nonhuman Animals
10. The Arena of Controversy: Bullfighting and Its Implications in Modern
Spanish Society
Part IV: LEGAL COLLUSION AND THE VIOLENCE OF ANIMAL CAPITAL
11. Horseracing as regulated cruelty: A nonhuman animal victimology
perspective.
12. Non-human animals as property: what this means when companion animals are
stolen
13. They have literally given up on life; A review of the experiences of
nonhuman animals subject to reproductive violence and coercion on factory and
puppy farms.
14. Which Animals Did Noah Eat?An Animal-Centric Focus on Food Crime
Part V: THE IDEOLOGICAL ARCHITECTURE OF PROFITABLE A-IC-RELATED-VIOLENCE
15. Inside the Spanish Zoological Park Industry: Worker Insights on
Human-Animal Relationships and Shared Vulnerabilities
16. If I Broke Down the Wall of Flesh: Blurring the Human/Animal
Distinction in the Slaughterhouse through Ivano Ferraris Poetry"
17. Embodying Non-speciesism through Altered States of Consciousness
18. A Time to Kill: Cruelty and Compassion with Companion Animals and Urban
Wildlife
19. The Lennie Small Paradox: Loving Animals to Death
Index
Gwen Hunnicutt is Professor of Sociology at the University of North Carolina Greensboro. She studies gender violence its varieties, causes, consequences, interspecies entanglements, and politicizations. She is the author of Gender Violence in Ecofeminist Perspective.
Richard Twine is Reader in Sociology and Co-Director of the Centre for Human-Animal Studies (CfHAS) at Edge Hill University, UK. He is the author of The Climate Crisis and Other Animals (2024), Animals as Biotechnology Ethics, Sustainability and Critical Animal Studies (2010) and he co-edited (with Nik Taylor) The Rise of Critical Animal Studies From the Margins to the Centre (2014). He has also published several articles on ecofeminism, vegan transition, the food system, and the animal-industrial complex.
Kenneth Mentor is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Sociology and Criminology at the University of North Carolina Wilmington. His published research includes peer-reviewed papers in the disciplines of criminology, organizational behavior, public administration, law and society, and online learning.