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Vukani Makhosikazi South African women speakBarrett, J, Dawber, A, Klugman, B, Obery, I, Shindler, J, Yawitch, J 06 1900 (has links)
There are mainly women in the factory. There are a few men who work at the big pots cooking asparagus - about seven men.The women work in the sections packing the full tins onto the pallets and moving them. The workers in the fields have it better, they start at six o'clock and every day they knock off at three o'clock. Their food is taken to them on tractors
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Illegal art : photography in the age of the Ag GagPlews, Kai Ronald 01 May 2016 (has links)
Where does your food come from?
This is a simple question that many people ask but don't truly want to have to answer to. We have some idea of the concept of farming that is cobbled together from images taken from the media and advertisements. The vision of a small pastoral farm where animals roam around in outdoor pens or live in stately wooden barns is the idea that comes to mind when we think of farming.
This concept could not be further from the actual truth. This difference between your perception and the reality is due to a widespread effort to block images of modern farming practices from public view. Those orchestrating this deception are so powerful that they have pushed censorship laws onto nineteen different states in the United States. These laws are collectively called the Ag Gag.
This series of photographs was created to shed light on modern farming practices and to bring awareness to the overreach of agricultural corporations in dictating laws limiting individual free speech. In this work you see images of what modern large scale animal farming actually looks like. You will also see what impacts this has on the environment and learn about the benefits and problems with this type of farming.
In the end the most important question I want you to ask yourself is:
Is this where I want my food coming from?
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