

Joshua Specht, "Red Meat Republic: A Hoof-to-Table History of How Beef Changed America" (Princeton UP, 2019)
Aug 31, 2025
Historian Joshua Specht, a lecturer at Monash University and visiting assistant professor at Notre Dame, delves into the deep roots of America's beef obsession. He reveals how 19th-century colonialism and corporate control transformed beef into a staple of American culture. The conversation touches on the origins of industrial beef, its cultural significance, and consumer movements advocating for change. Specht also highlights the often-overlooked violence behind beef production and the intricate balance between individual ranch stories and broader economic themes.
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Beef Built Modern America
- The U.S. pioneered an industrial beef model centered on centralized processors and low consumer prices.
- That model shaped Western power, identity, and the modern regulatory state.
The Cattle Beef Complex Defined
- The 'cattle beef complex' bundles ecosystems, culture, labor, and institutions that keep beef on the table.
- It links production and consumption as an integrated social and environmental system.
Violence Enabled Ranching Expansion
- Land dispossession and Indian Wars were foundational to Western ranching's scale and legitimacy.
- Reservation policies and corrupt beef contracts helped kickstart the ranching industry.