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Happy Meat: The Sadness and Joy of a Paradoxical Idea (Culture and Economic Life)

By Josee Johnston, Shyon Baumann, Emily Huddart Kennedy, Merin Oleschuk

Psychology, General non-fiction, Lifestyle

Synthetic audio, Automated braille

Summary

North Americans love eating meat. Despite the increased awareness of the meat industry's harms–violence against animals, health problems, and associations with environmental degradation–the rate of meat eating hasn't changed significantly in recent years. Instead, what has emerged is an uncomfortable… paradox: a need to square one's values with the behaviors that contradict those values. Using a large-scale, multidimensional, and original dataset, Happy Meat explores the thoughts and emotions that underpin our moral decision-making in this meat paradox. Conscientious meat-eaters turn to the notion of "happy meat" to make sense of their behaviors by consuming meat they see as more healthy, ethical, and sustainable. Happy meat might be labeled grass fed, free-range, antibiotic free, naturally raised, or humane. The people who produce and consume it, together, make up the complex landscape of conscientious meat-eating in modern Western societies. The discourse of happy meat ultimately may not be a sufficient response to all the critiques of meat eating, rife as it is with contradictions. However, it offers a powerful case for understanding how moral boundaries and notions of the 'good eater' are constructed through negotiations of values, identity, and status.

Title Details

ISBN 9781503642843
Publisher Stanford University Press
Copyright Date 2025
Book number 6603013
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Happy Meat: The Sadness and Joy of a Paradoxical Idea (Culture and Economic Life)

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