Making the Modern ‘Meat Complex': The Co-production of Humans and Livestock in Finnish Agricultural Modernization, c. 1880s–1960s

Bidragets beskrivning

This project at Tampere University examines the expansion of livestock production, the ‘meatification' of society and the changing relationships between animals and humans as Finnish animal husbandry shifted from domestic self-sufficiency to commercial agribusiness, c. 1880s–1960s. Particular attention is paid to pigs, the first farmed animals produced for the meat trade in Finland. Data includes, e.g., archival sources, farming publications, legislation, oral histories and photographs. By focusing on pigs as much as on humans, the project makes pigs visible as agents of modernization and sentient beings who have been an important part of history and co-constructors of modern society, and who therefore have historical experiences that are not the same everywhere. It also shows how local phenomena (such as the expansion of Finnish pig farming) have influenced larger-scale and planetary phenomena (such as climate change) through multiple, recursive and aleatory acts.
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Startår

2025

Slutår

2029

Beviljade finansiering

Marja Jalava Orcid -palvelun logo
599 994 €

Finansiär

Finlands Akademi

Typ av finansiering

Akademiprojekt

Beslutfattare

Forskningsrådet för kultur och samhälle
17.06.2025

Övriga uppgifter

Finansieringsbeslutets nummer

369144

Vetenskapsområden

Historia och arkeologi

Forskningsområden

Historiatieteet