The pig & I The tale of our relationship with a beast we eat

Kristoffer Hatteland Endresen

Book - 2023

"In this lively and fascinating book, a guilt-ridden, bacon-loving journalist finds work at an industrial pig farm as he researches the long and torrid history of humans and swine. After convincing a skeptical pig farmer to take him on as a hired hand for six months, journalist Kristoffer Endresen follows a litter of piglets from birth to slaughter, all in the hopes of understanding what goes on inside an industrial pig farm and whether humans can ethically justify eating pork ... which just so happens to be the most consumed animal protein in the world."--

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2nd Floor New Shelf 338.4766492/Endresen (NEW SHELF) Due Sep 26, 2024
Subjects
Published
Vancouver ; Berkeley ; London : Greystone Books [2023]
Language
English
Norwegian
Main Author
Kristoffer Hatteland Endresen (author)
Other Authors
Lucy Moffatt (translator)
Item Description
Translation of: Litt som oss: en fortelling om grisen.
Physical Description
281 pages ; 24 cm
Audience
1140L
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781771649902
  • Prologue
  • 1. An Impossible Meeting
  • 2. Eating Like a Pig
  • 3. Quarantine
  • 4. The First Encounter
  • 5. The Animal That Domesticated Itself
  • 6. Not on the Same Wavelength
  • 7. The Forbidden Animal
  • 8. "Indeed, Allah Is Forgiving and Merciful"
  • 9. Appetite and Aversion
  • 10. Naked and Imprisoned
  • 11. Against Nature
  • 12. The Human Model
  • 13. Ugly Mug
  • 14. Is Anybody Home?
  • 15. Among Neurons and Neural Pathways
  • 16. What We Talk About When We Talk About Suffering
  • 17. Slaughter
  • Epilogue
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

The empathetic and entertaining debut from journalist Endresen draws on the six months he spent working on a pig farm to survey humanity's complex relationship with the animal. Interspersing descriptions of mucking stalls and inseminating sows with a porcine history lesson that begins 45,000 years ago, Endresen notes that "humanity's first known figurative drawing is a sketch of a pig." Domesticated in China and brought to Europe as a food source, the pig soon became a despised and demonized animal in the West. As omnivores willing to eat anything--feces, each other, dead bodies, and even small children--the pig was banished from Roman cities, an attitude that persisted through the Middle Ages. In the 1800s, scientists uncovered anatomical similarities between pigs and humans; in the 1970s, studies revealed the pig's high level of intelligence. Both discoveries raised ethical questions about the factory farming of pigs, even as a massive and "utterly invisible" globe-spanning pork production industry arose ("Over the past half century, no animal has been more widely eaten in the world than the pig," Endresen writes). Refreshingly honest in his self-appraisal, Endresen concludes by reflecting (as he transports the pigs he raised on the farm to slaughter) on how he will continue to eat pork, even as he despairs over the mass carnage. This is an enlightening meditation on a troubling moral issue. (Oct.)

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