Many Meats and Many Milks? The Ontological Politics of a Proposed Post-animal Revolution
(2019) In Science as Culture 28(1). p.70-97- Abstract
- 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... (More)
- 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 practices, sites and objects compared to influential studies of ontological politics, necessitates bringing in hitherto relatively unexplored political-economic relations and legal processes. As global processes and problem formulations, laboratories, and national or regional regulations come together to remake realities the ontological-political dynamics determining the fate of cellular agriculture or a post-animal bioeconomy becomes shaped by a combination of conflicts and budding collaborations between proponents of new technologies and established livestock interests. Understanding these dynamics requires tracing both how post-animal products reshape the world they are introduced into, and acknowledging the friction evident as reality-carrying objects leave their laboratories. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/5730b134-6430-4766-9c00-9c72367b4806
- author
- Jönsson, Erik LU ; Linné, Tobias LU and McCrow Young, Ally
- organization
- publishing date
- 2019
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- Meat, Milk, Biotechnology, Ontological politics, Food
- in
- Science as Culture
- volume
- 28
- issue
- 1
- pages
- 28 pages
- publisher
- Taylor & Francis
- external identifiers
-
- scopus:85057531546
- ISSN
- 0950-5431
- DOI
- 10.1080/09505431.2018.1544232
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 5730b134-6430-4766-9c00-9c72367b4806
- date added to LUP
- 2018-11-29 11:29:31
- date last changed
- 2022-04-25 19:08:29
@article{5730b134-6430-4766-9c00-9c72367b4806, abstract = {{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 practices, sites and objects compared to influential studies of ontological politics, necessitates bringing in hitherto relatively unexplored political-economic relations and legal processes. As global processes and problem formulations, laboratories, and national or regional regulations come together to remake realities the ontological-political dynamics determining the fate of cellular agriculture or a post-animal bioeconomy becomes shaped by a combination of conflicts and budding collaborations between proponents of new technologies and established livestock interests. Understanding these dynamics requires tracing both how post-animal products reshape the world they are introduced into, and acknowledging the friction evident as reality-carrying objects leave their laboratories.}}, author = {{Jönsson, Erik and Linné, Tobias and McCrow Young, Ally}}, issn = {{0950-5431}}, keywords = {{Meat; Milk; Biotechnology; Ontological politics; Food}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{1}}, pages = {{70--97}}, publisher = {{Taylor & Francis}}, series = {{Science as Culture}}, title = {{Many Meats and Many Milks? The Ontological Politics of a Proposed Post-animal Revolution}}, url = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/54982714/Many_Meats_and_Many_Milks_The_Ontological_Politics_of_a_Proposed_Post_animal_Revolution_1.pdf}}, doi = {{10.1080/09505431.2018.1544232}}, volume = {{28}}, year = {{2019}}, }