- Library Home /
- Search Collections /
- Open Collections /
- Browse Collections /
- UBC Theses and Dissertations /
- An examination of the animal-industrial complex through...
Open Collections
UBC Theses and Dissertations
UBC Theses and Dissertations
An examination of the animal-industrial complex through a biopolitical framework Gordon, Taylor
Abstract
In my thesis, I integrate Michel Foucault’s theory of biopower and biopolitics to analyse the systems of power that enable the animal-industrial complex, inclusive of the slaughterhouse, factory farm, and “humane” farm. First termed by Noske (1989), the animal-industrial complex is defined by normalising the institutionalised exploitation of animals as commodities. Specifically, I present the slaughterhouse as a modern representation of the Panopticon, a polyvalent disciplinary apparatus in the form of a prison designed by Jeremy Bentham in the eighteenth century. The panoptic metaphor is useful to illustrate how the concealment of violence through spatial and labour divisions, racialized employee selection, and hierarchized roles of authority and surveillance work to support animal-based agriculture in Canada. Additionally, I detail the ways that the animal-industrial complex is sustained by Canadian constitutional law. I analyse Canadian Ag-gag legislation, federal laws that arguably silence whistleblowers from exposing industrialised animal cruelty, to emphasize the linked repercussions in the areas of food safety standards, public health, and the ethical irresponsibility of killing animals for human gain. To support this argument, I scrutinise the animals-as-property model, which, according to Canadian anti-cruelty laws under the Criminal Code, allows humans to use animals as long as they do not inflict unnecessary suffering on the animal. The exploitation of animals within the animal-industrial complex is linked to a myriad of consequences that are aggravating a worldwide environmental crisis fueled by climate change, pollution, and species extinction. In the midst of a zoonotic pandemic and the Anthropocene, the implications of my thesis are of critical concern in the contemporary moment—to say nothing of concern for the growing, unfathomable number of animals confined, dominated, and slaughtered each year in the animal-industrial complex for the sole purpose of human gain.
Item Metadata
Title |
An examination of the animal-industrial complex through a biopolitical framework
|
Creator | |
Supervisor | |
Publisher |
University of British Columbia
|
Date Issued |
2022
|
Description |
In my thesis, I integrate Michel Foucault’s theory of biopower and biopolitics to analyse the systems of power that enable the animal-industrial complex, inclusive of the slaughterhouse, factory farm, and “humane” farm. First termed by Noske (1989), the animal-industrial complex is defined by normalising the institutionalised exploitation of animals as commodities. Specifically, I present the slaughterhouse as a modern representation of the Panopticon, a polyvalent disciplinary apparatus in the form of a prison designed by Jeremy Bentham in the eighteenth century. The panoptic metaphor is useful to illustrate how the concealment of violence through spatial and labour divisions, racialized employee selection, and hierarchized roles of authority and surveillance work to support animal-based agriculture in Canada.
Additionally, I detail the ways that the animal-industrial complex is sustained by Canadian constitutional law. I analyse Canadian Ag-gag legislation, federal laws that arguably silence whistleblowers from exposing industrialised animal cruelty, to emphasize the linked repercussions in the areas of food safety standards, public health, and the ethical irresponsibility of killing animals for human gain. To support this argument, I scrutinise the animals-as-property model, which, according to Canadian anti-cruelty laws under the Criminal Code, allows humans to use animals as long as they do not inflict unnecessary suffering on the animal.
The exploitation of animals within the animal-industrial complex is linked to a myriad of consequences that are aggravating a worldwide environmental crisis fueled by climate change, pollution, and species extinction. In the midst of a zoonotic pandemic and the Anthropocene, the implications of my thesis are of critical concern in the contemporary moment—to say nothing of concern for the growing, unfathomable number of animals confined, dominated, and slaughtered each year in the animal-industrial complex for the sole purpose of human gain.
|
Genre | |
Type | |
Language |
eng
|
Date Available |
2022-07-29
|
Provider |
Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library
|
Rights |
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
|
DOI |
10.14288/1.0416492
|
URI | |
Degree | |
Program | |
Affiliation | |
Degree Grantor |
University of British Columbia
|
Graduation Date |
2022-09
|
Campus | |
Scholarly Level |
Graduate
|
Rights URI | |
Aggregated Source Repository |
DSpace
|
Item Media
Item Citations and Data
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International