Paul R. Josephson

Chicken


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and respectful treatment” of chickens in a series of book and other publications.29

      Annie Potts focuses precisely on the chicken in a cultural and social history of the bird, and includes a chapter on chickens as meat machines in a readable and informative study.30 In a handsomely illustrated natural history of the chicken, Joseph Barber provides chapter and verse on the chicken historically, but mostly from a sociobiological and behaviorist perspective.31 These books reflect the growing concern about how chickens became meat machines, and how – tracing the cultural history of the bird – we might recover some of our humanity in recognizing its place in our global world over the centuries and millennia.

      In the opus of her work, Harriet Ritvo reminds us of the importance of the subject of animals in environmental history. She points out that environmental historians closely examine the history of livestock and domesticated animals, not only for the impact of human–animal relations on the environment, but because animals are connected with various institutions, including research institutes, agribusinesses and multinational corporations that seek to make and patent them and their feeds. They include hunters, trappers and furriers with the rise of commercial interests and overexploitation; not only farmers, but breeders, scientists, and researchers. They are local people and consumers at supermarkets. They are connected to granges and cooperatives and extension services.”34

      Some people have written about the industrialization of agriculture as natural and expected, if from a technologically determinist and nearly utopian perspective, ignoring the costs and consequences, and suggesting that local communities will always adjust. Hiram Drache, a historian of agriculture, writing in the 1970s, insisted that largeracreage farms were the most efficient and modern of American farms, while noting that family farms, the mythical foundation of American republicanism, would survive the onslaught of technological change. By efficient, he meant by such measures as acres harvested per machine, yield per acre, and yield per animal. He did point out an important fact: far from being a product of capitalism alone, government programs were central in stimulating the growth of large-scale agriculture,38 as they had been directly and indirectly through the US Department of Agriculture (USDA). Powerful machines – greater horsepower – enabled one farmer to do the work with fewer hours of hired labor per season, while comfort at the controls – two-way radio, air conditioning, a smooth ride – enabled expansion of farms to the horizon. Drache argumentatively suggested that government programs of “a non-price support nature, such as Occupational Safety and Health standards, environmental regulations, and social and labor legislation” were inappropriate, for they would discourage the small-farm operator from staying in the business as too expensive.39

      Yet Drache found it possible to conclude that, even if large-scale practices were advantageous for all meat-animal industries, the farms of the twenty-first century would still be family-oriented units.40 On this level alone, Drache ignored the fact that massive farms armed with industrial tools, lax regulation, and government subsidies do not constitute “family farms.” He optimistically noted that the social implications of the tying of industry to agriculture would be substantial, but insisted that “people will adjust and the end result will be a better life style.” He tried to suggest that people who protest against this situation are Luddites of some sort, like those who railed against the Industrial Revolution where all turned out for the better.41