The Midwest and Meatpacking
"Warren expands upon the geographical framework that he established in Struggling with 'Iowa's Pride' by exploring how today's meatpacking industry created two very different bases of smaller towns and larger cities, each playing a different role in the gathering of live animals, their slaughtering and processing, and the distribution of finished products. Along with this analytical breakthrough, he incorporates the environmental and cultural impacts of the industry within a regional and temporal framework that makes a genuine contribution to scholarly literature. Accessibly written, flowing easily and comfortably, Warren's extensively researched narrative will be eagerly read by scholars and discerning activists, from politicians and economists to union organizers."--Peter Rachleff, author of Hard-Pressed in the Heartland: The Hormel Strike and the Future of the Labor Movement
Wilson Warren is associate professor of history at Western Michigan University in Kalamazoo. A native of Ottumwa, Iowa, he has published several articles and one previous book on meatpacking, Struggling with ""Iowa's Pride"": Labor Relations, Unionism, and Politics in the Rural Midwest since 1877 (IOWA, 2000). He is also the coauthor of Ottumwa and Teaching History in the Digital Classroom.