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Thomas Fleischman, "Communist Pigs: An Animal History of East Germany's Rise and Fall" (U Washington Press, 2020)

Nov 9, 2025
Thomas Fleischman, an Assistant Professor of History at the University of Rochester and author of 'Communist Pigs,' dives into the peculiar role of pigs in East Germany's agricultural evolution. He discusses how the nation became a pork powerhouse while facing severe environmental crises. Through the lenses of industrial, garden, and wild boar pigs, Fleischman reveals the unintended consequences of factory farming and governmental oversight. He also connects past agricultural practices to current issues of food production and environmental sustainability.
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ANECDOTE

How A Fulbright Train Ride Sparked The Book

  • Thomas Fleischman arrived in rural Mecklenburg-Vorpommern on a Fulbright and noticed enormous fields and almost no people working them.
  • While researching archives in Berlin he found file after file focused on pigs, which redirected his project toward pigs as an environmental lens.
INSIGHT

From Collectives To Export-Oriented Factory Farms

  • East German agriculture industrialized from the GDR's start but shifted toward vertically integrated export-focused factory farms in the late 1960s–70s.
  • The state prioritized technologically advanced model farms while expecting collectives to later adopt their methods.
INSIGHT

Three Pigs, Three Stories

  • Fleischman frames three pig archetypes: the industrial pig, the garden pig, and the wild boar to tell East Germany's agricultural story.
  • Each pig type reveals a different facet of industrialization, private subsistence, and ecological side-effects.
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