Review "Because each example of food-centered action is fraught with contradictions, ambiguities and paradoxes, Weiss’s descriptions are appropriately rich and multidimensional to portray those complexities. . . . Brad Weiss invites us to hear the voices of the people involved from all directions." (Paul Durrenberger Bronislaw Magazine 2016-08-01)"While Real Pigs would be scintillating for anyone interested in the recent rise of the local-food movement, for anthropologists who study food, especially in the United States, it should be required reading. It provides a welcome model for how to integrate the production, circulation, and consumption of food into a single analysis. The book is accessibly written and would be appropriate for advanced undergraduate courses on the anthropology of food or economic anthropology and graduate courses on the same topics, as well as those on the anthropology of the United States. It would work well in courses on ethnographic research methods, too, because it provides a laudable example of research across multiple fields as well as an innovative way to highlight research participants’ views." (Jillian R. Cavanaugh American Anthropologist 2017-06-01)"Real Pigs will be of interest to practitioners who are developing new markets, with its biographical stories of the people who are building the connections and its portrait of how taste is constructed in place. Making pigs local, according to Weiss, involves animal husbandry, marketing strategies, and social networking. Yet he is sensitive to the cosmopolitan values that inform 'locality.' The book will be of interest also to those who are exploring how markets are built and sustained over time, and how complex relationships support often precarious niche markets and foodways." (Sarah J. Martin Journal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development 2017-03-08)"Weiss’s ethnography is genuinely readable and, without intending to insult the ethnographer as to the intricacy of his craftsmanship, Real Pigs makes an ideal text through which to engage with undergraduates. Written in plain English, introducing holistic ethnography, participant-observation and ethnographic interviews, the theory is neither overwhelming nor underwhelming in measure." (Adele Millard Anthropological Forum 2017-07-31)"While much has been written about food systems and small-scale agriculture, Real Pigs is a striking portrait of contemporary debates about food systems from the perspectives of those mostly deeply engaged in one particular system." (Ashley Stinnett American Ethnologist 2018-02-01)"Ethnography can show how the things people think of as natural are shaped by history, politics, and culture. This is probably most difficult when the ethnographer is working in their own society and when their readers are most likely going to be the natives themselves. The fact that Weiss mostly succeeds in this challenge is one of the most remarkable aspects of this book. . . . Essential reading for food studies scholars, as well as for anthropologists interested in some of the more interesting recent theoretical debates noted above." (David Beriss Journal of Anthropological Research 2018-09-01) Read more Review "Moving beyond normative debates over whether eating local is a moral good, Brad Weiss shows us that locality itself comes into view through American understandings of what 'good' food is and should be. Real Pigs gives us rich fodder to think about the interconnections of taste and place, consumption and production, capital and labor, humans and animals in the contemporary United States."  (Heather Paxson, author of The Life of Cheese: Crafting Food and Value in America)"I have covered the Triangle's food scene since 2007, interviewing and profiling many of the same people as Brad Weiss. Revealing layers to the local food movement and the production of pastureraised pork that were previously unknown to me, Real Pigs is a fascinating examination of a local market and, by extension, any local market in the United States."  (Andrea Weigl, News & Observer (Raleigh)) Read more See all Editorial Reviews
C**0
Supply and Demand for Pasture Raised, Heritage Breed, Locally Slaughtered Pork
I raise Tamworth breed hogs on pasture in New England and applaud this author for sticking his snout in rarely disturbed ground for this genre, raising uncomfortable topics such as class and race and why foodies at upscale metropolitan farmers' markets frequently inquire about sustainable environmental practices but never ask about sustainable wages for farm laborers or meat processors at the regional abbatoir. One criticism: this book is written by an academic in academese, a language I do not speak and cannot understand. Two examples: "Authenticity is plainly an ethnographically observable motivation, but it is also a complex symbolic form that I argue needs to be better theorized, rather than dissolved as epiphenomenal in a constructivist framework of invented traditions and fetishized commodities." And later, "An appreciation of this innovative taste--a capacity for discernment, both objectified and subjectified--is, therefore, a dimension of a reconfigured sensory field entailed in the reproduction of pigs in a local landscape." (Grunt.)
Trustpilot
1 week ago
1 month ago