The Sexual Politics of Meat Slide Show is an evolving 1 and 1/4 hour dynamic and challenging presentation that discusses the images of women and animals in contemporary popular culture by drawing upon the ideas found in The Sexual Politics of Meat and The Pornography of Meat. It introduces the concept of the absent referent through autobiography and then systematically applies an analysis of how it functions to explain the animalizing of women in contemporary cultural images and the sexualizing of animals used for food. It draws upon images that have been sent from around the world and is constantly being updated as it tracks changes in popular culture. The Slide Show provides an ecofeminist analysis of the interconnected oppressions of sexism, racism, and speciesism by exploring the way popular culture presents images of race, gender, and species to further oppressive attitudes. It also suggests forms of resistance against the construction of individuals, human or non-human, as "meat." Drawing upon images from popular culture, it answers the question: how does someone become a piece of meat? The slide show demonstrates how a trinity of interrelated forces--objectification, fragmentation, and consumption--impact our cultural and personal consciousness about women and animals. The Sexual Politics of Meat Slide Show has been presented on campuses across the country. From Oregon to Maine, from experimental schools to universities with slaughterhouses on their campus, the slide show attracts a diverse audience and prompts spirited discussions. Student's comments on the Sexual Politics of Meat Slide Show
Professors’s comments on the slide show:
Among the issues the slide show addresses are:
In all of this, we encounter the underlying hostility to women that is conveyed, through the supposed neutral medium of meat eating. The connections--and images--are everywhere. Through the sexual politics of meat, consuming images such as these provide a way for our culture to talk openly about and joke about the objectification of women without having to acknowledge that this is what they are doing. These issues are "in our face" all the time. We do not perceive them as problematic because we are so used to having our dominant culture mirror these attitudes. We become shaped by and participants in the structure of the absent referent.
[Some of the schools where the Sexual Politics of Meat Slide Show has been shown: Agnes Scott College, Augustana College, Beloit College, Bowling Green University, California State Polytechnic University at Pomona, CalTech, Clark University, College of Charleston, Concordia University, Cornell University, Deerfield Academy, Denison College, Evergreen College, Franklin and Marshall College, Gustavus Adolphus College, Hamline University, Harvard College, Hope College, Kent State University, Knox College, Lewis and Clark College of Law, Marist College, Mt. Holyoke, New College, University of South Florida, Northwestern University, Oberlin College, Ohio University, Ohio Wesleyan, Oregon State University, Pennsylvania State University, Portland State University, Rutgers University, St. Cloud University, Scripps College, Seattle University, Sheffield University (England), Skidmore College Smith College, State University of New York (SUNY) at Binghamton, SUNY at Fredonia, SUNY at New Paltz, Southwestern University, Tufts University, University of Illinois, Champaign, University of Illinois, Normal, University of California at Berkeley, UCLA Law School, University of Chicago, University of Cincinnati, University of Maine at Orono, University of Michigan, University of North Texas, University of Florida, University of Oregon, University of Pittsburgh, University of Redlands, University of Rochester, University of Southern California, University of Tennessee, University of Texas at Austin, University of Texas at Arlington, University of Georgia, University of Wisconsin, Vassar College, Virginia Tech, Yale Law School, the World Vegetarian Congress in Toronto, the North American Vegetarian Summerfest.]
|