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The Once and Future Cow
Agency, Appetite, and the Anthropocene
The Once and Future Cow
Agency, Appetite, and the Anthropocene
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Description
This groundbreaking book shows how cows' choices have influenced the economic, agricultural, and socio-political development of the Americas.
Tracing the interconnected transformations of cattle, land, and labor from the 18th-century colonial Caribbean to the early national period of the 19th century to the present day, Kettler and Yingling demonstrate how cows impact on nearly every major aspect of development in the Americas, including colonization, slavery, our ability to objectify animals we consume, our current foodways, environmental degradation, and the climate emergency. Bringing together research from many fields, but proceeding always in a straightforward, chronological, historical manner underrepresented in other areas of animal studies, this book ultimately restores cattle as subjects of their own lives who in seeking to escape exploitation have deeply affected the legal, property, and geographical frameworks that haunt us today.
Table of Contents
1. Considering Cattle and the Colonial Caribbean
2. Tasting Cattle in New Ways
3. Conscious Cows: Sugar, Pens, and Policy
4. Denying Empathy in Modernity
5. Contemplating Cruelty
6. Biopower Over the Once and Future Cow
Conclusion: Contemporary Consequences of Consuming Cattle
Bibliography
Index
Product details

Published | 19 Mar 2026 |
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Format | Hardback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 264 |
ISBN | 9781350568273 |
Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
Dimensions | 234 x 156 mm |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Charlton Yingling and Andrew Kettle show how our cattle-centric culture is a relatively recent development. And, in this, they offer hope: for if our culture's red meat hunger hasn't always been with us, change is possible. Their truly original book illustrates the urgency of seeing cattle as agents, not objects, when exploring historical records and addressing staggering ethical problems. These are among the reasons The Once and Future Cow is a tour de force, both timely and bold, arresting and illuminating.
Carol J. Adams, author, The Sexual Politics of Meat
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The Once and Future Cow makes a powerful argument that European settlement across the Atlantic, including efforts to control and profit from animal agents with consciousness, laid the foundations for the modern world's exploitative industrial beef economy that threatens the global environment. Kettler and Yingling ground big picture ethical arguments in a more specific and vital history of cattle economies of the Atlantic World, and especially the British Caribbean, where they developed alongside the institution of slavery.
John Ryan Fisher, University of Wisconsin, USA