Article written by DPDF 2008 Animal Studies fellow Colter Ellis in the Sociological Quarterly.

This study examines cattle producers’ work in conventional U.S. beef production. Producers express emotional connection to cattle, but also treat cattle as economic assets. Balancing these perspectives is central to their work. This article introduces the concept of “boundary labor” to describe the way producers’ emotion management separates cattle physically and emotionally from products derived from their bodies. Producers have three central emotional skills that make this labor possible. They include (1) a sense of responsibility, (2) sentiments of dominion, and (3) faith in the cycle of production.

Publication Details

Title
Boundary Labor and the Production of Emotionless Commodities: The Case of Beef Production
Authors
Ellis, Colter
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons
Publish Date
December 2013
Citation
Ellis, Colter, Boundary Labor and the Production of Emotionless Commodities: The Case of Beef Production (John Wiley & Sons, December 2013).
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