The Sexual Politics of Meat: A Feminist-Vegetarian Critical Theory explores a relationship between patriarchal values and meat eating by interweaving the insights of feminism, vegetarianism, animal defense, and literary theory. The New York Times called it “a bible of the vegan community.” It is available in a Tenth Anniversary Edition. When it first appeared in 1990, Library Journal called The Sexual Politics of Meat "an important and provocative work" and predicted it would "inspire and enrage readers across the political spectrum." True to Library Journal's prediction, the book was hailed by CHOICE as a "’bible' for feminist and progressive animal rights activists" and equally reviled by conservative commentators, including Rush Limbaugh.
The appearance of The Sexual Politics of Meat triggered dramatic international media coverage of the book. Polity Press in the United Kingdom immediately issued a British Edition. Full page articles appeared in Australian and Dutch newspapers; reviews appeared in Italy and Norway as well as in Great Britain and the United States. The Kirkus Review concluded that it was "an intelligent polemic...Adams's observations are telling, most are seductively sprung...the argument is both thoughtful and thought-provoking." Publisher's Weekly observed that "Carol J. Adams's original, provocative book makes a major contribution to the debate on animal rights."
The Sexual Politics of Meat has been translated into Japanese, Korean, Chinese, and German. It is published by Continuum International.
In response to the ideas in The Sexual Politics of Meat, readers from all over the continent sent me examples that they felt proved her point. I culled from these menus, advertisements, pictures of billboards, matchcovers, t-shirts to create The Sexual Politics of Meat Slide Show. Some of these images are reproduced in the Tenth Anniversary Edition, which also features a new preface explaining how the book came about.
Reviews of The Sexual Politics of Meat:
A clearheaded scholar joins the ideas of two movements--vegetarianism and feminism--and turns them into a single coherent and moral theory. Her argument is rational and persuasive....New ground--whole acres of it--is broken by Adams.
--Washington Post Book World
An important and provocative work...the author provides a compelling case for inextricably linking feminist and vegetarian theory. This book is likely to both inspire and enrage readers across the political spectrum.
--Library Journal
An intelligent polemic...Adams's observations are telling, most are seductively sprung...the argument is both thoughtful and thought-provoking.
-- The Kirkus Reviews
Carol J. Adams's original, provocative book makes a major contribution to the debate on animal rights.
--Publisher's Weekly
The Sexual Politics of Meat by Carol J. Adams examines the historical, gender, race, and class implications of meat culture, and makes the links between the practice of butchering/eating animals and the maintenance of male dominance. Read this powerful new book and you may well become a vegetarian.
--Ms. Magazine
Depiction of animal exploitation as one manifestation of a brutal patriarchal culture has been explored in two books by Carol J. Adams, The Sexual Politics of Meat and Neither Man nor Beast: Feminism and the Defense of Animals. Adams argues that factory farming is part of a whole culture of oppression and institutionalized violence. The treatment of animals as objects is parallel to and associated with patriarchal society's objectification of women, blacks and other minorities in order to routinely exploit them. Adams excels in constructing unexpected juxtapositions by using the language of one kind of relationship to illuminate another. Employing poetic rather than rhetorical techniques, Adams makes powerful connections that encourage readers to draw their own conclusions.
--Choice
With this bold and provocative book, a powerful champion of animal rights has entered the lists, challenging the patriarchal domination of the Western world's eating habits.
--National Women's Studies Association Journal
The Sexual Politics of Meat couldn't be more timely, or more disturbing.
--Environmental Ethics
Carol Adams’s (1990) provocative analysis of the masculinist privileging of meat eating, and of feminist interventions to destabilize Western patriarchal (animal) consumption, is a classic.
Echoing through the debates about animals are unmistakable invocations of familiar racist and sexist ideologies about ‘natural affinities,’ categories authorized by nature, destinies inscribed in biology, and ‘scientific proofs’ of the limited capacities of the ‘other’ that have rumbled through the centuries to justify slavery, the oppression of women, and ethnically and racially based holocausts and genocides. Two early feminist works remain unsurpassed trenchant analyses of these parallels: Marjorie Spiegel’s comparison between animal and human slavery, The Dreaded Comparison (1988) and Carol Adams’s treatise on the Sexual Politics of Meat (1990).
--Joni Seager, “Rachel Carson Died of Breast Cancer: The Coming Age of Feminist Environmentalism” Signs 28, no. 1 (Spring 2003), pp. 445-72.
How refreshing it was the first time I read your book The Sexual Politics of Meat. I actually heard the 'Consolidated' song first. My thinking seems to match yours on numerous issues and since finding your books when I was a young teenager till now (I am now 26) you are genuinely one person I have to thank for solidifying my beliefs. It is always a sigh of relief when there is someone else on the earth that concurs with your way of thoughts (especially in your early female teens).
--a reader in Australia
Table of Contents: The Sexual Politics of Meat
Preface to the Tenth Anniversary Edition
Preface
Part One: The Patriarchal Texts of Meat
1. The Sexual Politics of Meat
2. The Rape of Animals, the Butchering of Women
3. Masked Violence, Muted Voices
4. The Word Made Flesh
Part Two: From the Belly of Zeus
5. Dismembered Texts, Dismembered Animals
6. Frankenstein's Vegetarian Monster
7. Feminism, the Great War, and Modern Vegetarianism
Part Three: Eat Rice Have Faith in Women
8. The Distortion of the Vegetarian Body
9. For a Feminist-Vegetarian Critical Theory
Epilogue: Destablizing Patriarchal Consumption
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