Red Meat Republic, Joshua Specht
Red Meat Republic, Joshua Specht
16 Rating(s)
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Red Meat Republic
A Hoof-to-Table History of How Beef Changed America

Author: Joshua Specht

Series: Histories of Economic Life

Narrator: John Chancer

Unabridged: 9 hr 28 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 05/07/2019


Synopsis

In this audiobook, John Chancer narrates the story of how beef conquered America and gave rise to the modern industrial food complex By the late nineteenth century, Americans rich and poor had come to expect high-quality fresh beef with almost every meal. Beef production in the United States had gone from small-scale, localized operations to a highly centralized industry spanning the country, with cattle bred on ranches in the rural West, slaughtered in Chicago, and consumed in the nation's rapidly growing cities. Red Meat Republic tells the remarkable story of the violent conflict over who would reap the benefits of this new industry and who would bear its heavy costs. Joshua Specht puts people at the heart of his story—the big cattle ranchers who helped to drive the nation's westward expansion, the meatpackers who created a radically new kind of industrialized slaughterhouse, and the stockyard workers who were subjected to the shocking and unsanitary conditions described by Upton Sinclair in his novel The Jungle. Specht brings to life a turbulent era marked by Indian wars, Chicago labor unrest, and food riots in the streets of New York. He shows how the enduring success of the cattle-beef complex—centralized, low cost, and meatpacker dominated—was a consequence of the meatpackers' ability to make their interests overlap with those of a hungry public, while the interests of struggling ranchers, desperate workers, and bankrupt butchers took a backseat. America—and the American table—would never be the same again. Compelling and unfailingly enjoyable, Red Meat Republic reveals the complex history of exploitation and innovation behind the food we consume today.

Reviews

Goodreads review by Athan

Author Joshua Specht summarizes his book many times. Probably his best attempt comes toward the end, on page 258: “In the late nineteenth century, quality fresh beef became daily fare. A multiplicity of regional food markets became a single national one; ranches in the rural West could now feed the......more

Goodreads review by Vivek

I expected this book to be a micro-history of beef in America when I picked it up. +Turned out, this book is an exposé of the American cattle-beef industry's dark genesis through false romanticization of wild west ranchers in the American public's mind, violent exclusion of people and heavy industri......more

Goodreads review by Tim

This is one of the best books on nineteenth century American history that I have read even if occasionally the author presses a point a little too repetitively at times and he cannot help wearing his slightly standard issue liberal-leftism on his sleeve every now and then. These are minor flaws thoug......more

Goodreads review by Ryan

I'd go 3.5 stars. First off, humans can really suck. The stories early in this book about how white people decimated indigenous people made me feel sick. Here are some of my favorite excerpts: Beefs move to the center of the American diet depended on bison hunters and ranchers ecological remaking of......more

Goodreads review by Paul

Specht traces the historical development of the United States beef supply chain from expropriation of Native American land and the elimination of the buffalo through the development of a national transportation network and the consolidation of the packing industry, ending with beef's shift from bein......more