The Ice Plant Cometh: The Insular Cold Storage and Ice Plant, Frozen Meat, and the Imperial Biodeterioration of American Manila, 1900-1935

N. P. Ludovice
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

ABSTRACT This article examines the emergence of the Insular Cold Storage and Ice Plant as a site of preserving frozen meat and imperial action in response to biodeterioration in Manila under American rule between 1900 to 1935. Cold storage facilities allowed for the production, long-distance transportation, and storage of meat due to technological advances in refrigeration. While it was intended to control chemical breakdowns within meat, a multi-scalar analysis demonstrates how it also reinforced imperial biodeterioration. By focusing on the Insular Cold Storage and Ice Plant, this article argues that cold storage facilities both prevented and facilitated the process of biodeterioration. It also investigates the radicalized meanings of food, specifically with conceptions of “Western” meat as imported from Australia and U.S., versus Chinese meat. This article also considers the issues surrounding the global pathways of meat, racialized meanings of food, and the impact of imperial technologies on the local food landscape.
冰厂来了:岛屿冷库和冰厂,冷冻肉,以及美国马尼拉的帝国生物退化,1900-1935
本文考察了1900年至1935年美国统治下马尼拉作为保存冻肉和应对生物恶化的帝国行动的岛屿冷库和冰厂的出现。由于冷藏技术的进步,冷藏设施使肉类的生产、长途运输和储存成为可能。虽然它的目的是控制肉类中的化学分解,但多标量分析表明,它也加剧了帝国的生物变质。通过对岛屿冷库和冰厂的研究,本文认为冷库设施既可以防止生物变质,也可以促进生物变质。它还调查了食物的激进意义,特别是从澳大利亚和美国进口的“西方”肉类与中国肉类的概念。本文还考虑了围绕肉类全球路径的问题,食物的种族化意义,以及帝国技术对当地食物景观的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
1.20
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