Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6545872 | Journal of Rural Studies | 2014 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
The parlour system at Great Hopes Farm allows five workers (aided by three more stall staff) to milk over 1000 cows, fifty at a time, three times a day. The impetus behind moving to parlour technology is that it increases productivity through mechanically enhanced observation and control. However this recent mechanical separation of human and cow during the milking process has led to affectively shared interspecies and inter-human alienation. The technology of the parlour system sets daily rhythms for bovine and human alike, and separates both from a process formerly dependent upon, specialized knowledge, affective empathy, and embodied knowledge. Human and bovine experience the systemic violence of the machine and what remains is a complex bio-politics of interspecies affect and the separation of “bare” and “political” life.
Related Topics
Life Sciences
Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Forestry
Authors
Paul Hansen,