_"The traditional neighborly work of killing a hog and preparing it as
food for humans is either a fine art or a shameful mess. It requires
knowledge, experience, skill, good sense, and sympathy_," writes
Wendell Berry in the essay portion of this book. In November 1979 as
in years before, neighborly families gathered to do one of the
ceremonious jobs of farm life: hog killing. Tanya Berry had been given
a camera by _New Farm_ magazine to photograph Kentucky farmers at
work, and for two days at the farm of Owen and Loyce Flood in Henry
County, she captured this culmination of a year's labor raising
livestock. Here, in the resulting photographs, published for the first
time, the American agrarian tradition is shown at its most harmonious,
with strong men and women toiling with shared purpose towards a common
wealth.
Tanya Berry reveals intimate, expressive moments: the teams of young
men hoisting animals by physical strength onto a gambrel and wagon for
butchering, women grinding meat and mixing sausage and readying hams
for preservation, and the solidarity of human beings coming together
in reverence for the food they would eat, the lives and bodies which
would be taken, and those which would be strengthened.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781950564026
Publisert
2019
Utgiver
University Press of Kentucky
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter