The connection between people and companion animals has received
considerable attention from scholars. In her original and
provocative ethnography "Livestock/Deadstock," sociologist Rhoda
Wilkie asks, how do the men and women who work on farms, in
livestock auction markets, and slaughterhouses, interact withOCoor
disengage fromOCothe animals they encounter in their jobs?
a
Wilkie provides a nuanced appreciation of how those men and
women who breed, rear, show, fatten, market, medically treat, and
slaughter livestock, make sense of their interactions with the
animals that constitute the focus of their work lives. Using a
sociologically informed perspective, Wilkie explores their
attitudes and behaviors to explain how agricultural workers think,
feel, and relate to food animals.
a
"Livestock/Deadstock" looks at both people and animals in the
division of labor and shows how commercial and hobby productive
contexts provide male and female handlers with varying
opportunities to bond with and/or distance themselves from
livestock. Exploring the experiences of stockpeople, hobby farmers,
auction workers, vets and slaughterers, she offers timely insight
into the multifaceted, gendered, and contradictory nature of human
roles in food animal production. a
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