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Becoming Salmon Aquaculture and the Domestication of a Fish

By: Marianne Elisabeth Lien(Author)
232 pages, 12 b/w illustrations
Becoming Salmon
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  • Becoming Salmon ISBN: 9780520280571 Paperback Aug 2015 Not in stock: Usually dispatched within 6 days
    £29.99
    #224530
  • Becoming Salmon ISBN: 9780520280564 Hardback no dustjacket Aug 2015 Not in stock: Usually dispatched within 6 days
    £70.99
    #224529
Selected version: £29.99
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About this book

Becoming Salmon is the first ethnographic account of salmon aquaculture, the most recent turn in the human history of animal domestication. In this careful and nuanced study, Marianne Elisabeth Lien explores how the growth of marine domestication has blurred traditional distinctions between fish and animals, recasting farmed fish as sentient beings, capable of feeling pain and subject to animal-welfare legislation. Drawing on fieldwork on and off salmon farms, Lien follows farmed Atlantic salmon through contemporary industrial husbandry, exposing how salmon are bred to be hungry, globally mobile, and "alien" in their watersheds of origin.

Attentive to both the economic context of industrial food production and the materiality of human-animal relations, Becoming Salmon highlights the fragile and contingent relational practices that constitute salmon aquaculture and the multiple ways of "becoming salmon" that emerge as a result.

Customer Reviews

Biography

Marianne Elisabeth Lien is Professor of Social Anthropology at the University of Oslo, Norway.

By: Marianne Elisabeth Lien(Author)
232 pages, 12 b/w illustrations
Media reviews

"Becoming Salmon takes banal aspects of life and reveals their shocking strangeness. Marianne Elisabeth Lien traces this strangeness – navigating across theory, history, ethnography, and poignant personal accounts – to illustrate how the relation of human to nonhuman lies at the core of our lives."
– Ben Orlove, Professor at the Earth Institute, Columbia University, and coeditor of Darkening Peaks: Glacier Retreat, Science, and Society

"Through meticulous attention to the multiple practices of salmon farming in Norway and beyond, Lien convincingly shows how human and animal worlds are co-constituted in a mutual process of becoming."
– Kirsten Hastrup, Professor of Anthropology, University of Copenhagen

"Traveling with Lien, we learn that salmon domestication was always more lively, uncertain, and multiple than we had realized: salmon can come to have rights, they can be escapees, they can be biomass. Out of this multiplicity, Lien reveals a rich political and imaginative field."
– Andrew S. Mathews, Associate Professor of Anthropology, University of California, Santa Cruz, and author of Instituting Nature: Authority, Expertise, and Power in Mexican Forests

"Lien beckons us into the mysterious trading zone where species as different as humans and fish touch – and shape each other's fates."
– Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing, author of The Mushroom at the End of the World

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