Australian Tongue and Ag-gag Law

Iris Ralph
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Abstract

In this essay, I comment on two histories of animal farming in Australia in an ecocritical reading of several works of Australian literature: Tim Winton’s novel Shallows (1984), Susan Hawthorne’s collection of poetry, Cow (2011) and Francesca Rendle-Short’s novel Bite Your Tongue (2011). The first of those histories, the background of Shallows, refers to the whaling industry that operated in Western Australian waters up through the 1970s and the growing public awareness of that industry that eventually drove it to a halt in 1978, the year the main events of the novel take place. Cow and Bite Your Tongue, the texts that I mostly discuss, carry references to the history of industrial farming of cows in Australia, which, along with the industrial farming of other domesticated animal species, exploded after 1970 (in Australia and elsewhere in urban-industrialising countries), the same decade when Australians were beginning to rally behind animal rights activists’ opposition to whale slaughter. Today, almost half a century later, animal advocacy activists continue to raise pressing questions about animal species that are industrially farmed. They are doing so at the same time as the meat industry is attempting to restrict public access to and information about its operations. I address those questions in my reading of Hawthorne’s paean to cows and Rendle-Short’s references to the Moral Right movement in Queensland in the 1970s and attempts by its supporters to remove works of literature from school book shelves.
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澳大利亚语言和gag法
在这篇文章中,我通过对几部澳大利亚文学作品的生态批评阅读,评论了澳大利亚动物养殖的两段历史:蒂姆·温顿的小说《浅滩》(1984),苏珊·霍桑的诗集《牛》(2011)和弗朗西斯卡·伦德尔-肖特的小说《咬你的舌头》(2011)。这些历史中的第一部分,《浅滩》的背景,指的是整个20世纪70年代在西澳大利亚水域经营的捕鲸业,以及公众对该行业日益增长的认识,最终导致该行业在1978年停止,也就是小说主要事件发生的那一年。我主要讨论的两本书《牛》和《咬你的舌头》都提到了澳大利亚工业化养殖奶牛的历史。1970年(在澳大利亚和其他城市工业化国家)之后,澳大利亚人开始团结起来,支持动物权利活动家反对屠杀鲸鱼。近半个世纪后的今天,动物保护活动家继续对工业化养殖的动物物种提出紧迫的问题。他们这么做的同时,肉类行业正试图限制公众对其运营的访问和信息。我在阅读霍桑对奶牛的赞歌和伦德尔-肖特对20世纪70年代昆士兰州道德权利运动及其支持者试图从学校书架上撤下文学作品的引用时,回答了这些问题。
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The Collective Memory of the Hairy Man [Book Review] Teya Brooks Pribac's Enter the Animal Editorial Note: Ngā Tohu o te Huarere On Sharks Unseen [Review]Iris Ralph, Packing Death in Australian Literature: Ecosides and Eco-Sides, Routledge, 2022, 174pp.
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