Today plant-based alternatives to animal-agricultural products are made available or developed alongside ‘cultured’ meat, and products utilising genetic modification. To proponents, this signifies the emergence of ‘cellular agriculture’ as a food-production field or the possibility of a ‘post-animal bioeconomy’: a way to safely and sustainably produce animal products without animals. Drawing on previous work on ontological politics enables acknowledging how these novel objects unsettle animal products’ ontological stability, thereby offering a practical case of how the world is multiply produced. An important emphasis within this tradition is the situated nature of reality-making practices. Consequently our analysis, focusing on different p...
Proponents and developers of cell-cultured animal material (i.e. lab-grown meat) vest the innovation...
In recent years, the Marxist method of world-literary theory has given birth to world-ecological lit...
The year was 1931. In a line perhaps more suitable to science fiction writing at the time, Winston C...
Today plant-based alternatives to animal-agricultural products are made available or developed along...
This article calls into question how different the parallel ontologies of meat are in terms of the r...
Set against the attention given to animal‐agricultural geographies and animal agriculture's environm...
Animal agriculture in the US and Canada is a colonial geography borne of imported ontologies of prop...
How may emergent biotechnologies impact upon our relations with other animals? To what extent are an...
Slaughter sets the debate about what is acceptable to do to animals at an extremely low bar. Recentl...
Technology development is often considered to obfuscate democratic decision-making and is met with e...
Today, in vitro (Latin: in glass) meat researchers strive to overhaul meat production technologies b...
In this paper I examine several of the moral and political questions raised by new kinds of meat. I ...
The past decades’ substantial growth in globalized meat consumption continues to shape the internati...
This chapter considers the rise of alternative proteins (APs) and their current and potential impact...
There is a hypothesis in the anthropological literature (e.g. Milton, 2003) that our complex human b...
Proponents and developers of cell-cultured animal material (i.e. lab-grown meat) vest the innovation...
In recent years, the Marxist method of world-literary theory has given birth to world-ecological lit...
The year was 1931. In a line perhaps more suitable to science fiction writing at the time, Winston C...
Today plant-based alternatives to animal-agricultural products are made available or developed along...
This article calls into question how different the parallel ontologies of meat are in terms of the r...
Set against the attention given to animal‐agricultural geographies and animal agriculture's environm...
Animal agriculture in the US and Canada is a colonial geography borne of imported ontologies of prop...
How may emergent biotechnologies impact upon our relations with other animals? To what extent are an...
Slaughter sets the debate about what is acceptable to do to animals at an extremely low bar. Recentl...
Technology development is often considered to obfuscate democratic decision-making and is met with e...
Today, in vitro (Latin: in glass) meat researchers strive to overhaul meat production technologies b...
In this paper I examine several of the moral and political questions raised by new kinds of meat. I ...
The past decades’ substantial growth in globalized meat consumption continues to shape the internati...
This chapter considers the rise of alternative proteins (APs) and their current and potential impact...
There is a hypothesis in the anthropological literature (e.g. Milton, 2003) that our complex human b...
Proponents and developers of cell-cultured animal material (i.e. lab-grown meat) vest the innovation...
In recent years, the Marxist method of world-literary theory has given birth to world-ecological lit...
The year was 1931. In a line perhaps more suitable to science fiction writing at the time, Winston C...