Volume 27, Issue 1 pp. 49-65
Original Article

Going feral: Wild meat consumption and the uncanny in Melbourne, Australia

Catie Gressier

Corresponding Author

Catie Gressier

The University of Melbourne

Please send correspondence to Catie Gressier: [email protected]Search for more papers by this author
First published: 15 July 2015
Citations: 16

Abstract

Feral animals are commonly constructed as the scourge of the Australian landscape. The transgressive act of introduced, domestic animals going wild elicits strong emotive responses within the community, often conceived in a kind of Freudian spectre of das unheimliche (the uncanny/unhomely), as the once familiar becomes uncontrolled, strange and frightening. Meanwhile, exponential global growth in human populations, and the resulting strain on the environment and food security, is necessitating the rethinking of meat consumption. In Australia, while the stigma surrounding feral animals has historically inhibited their consumption, feral meat is regarded by a growing body of advocates as an environmentally favourable alternative to farmed meat, allowing not only the avoidance of animal suffering within the industrial agriculture model, but also benefitting ecosystems through the removal of damage-wreaking interlopers. This paper explores the feral turn and its contemporary manifestations as a growing food movement in Melbourne.

The full text of this article hosted at iucr.org is unavailable due to technical difficulties.