And This Little Piggy Had None; Challenging the Dominant Discourse on Farmed Animals in Children's Picturebooks Quotes

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And This Little Piggy Had None; Challenging the Dominant Discourse on Farmed Animals in Children's Picturebooks (Education and Struggle, #16) And This Little Piggy Had None; Challenging the Dominant Discourse on Farmed Animals in Children's Picturebooks by Janae Dimick
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And This Little Piggy Had None; Challenging the Dominant Discourse on Farmed Animals in Children's Picturebooks Quotes Showing 1-2 of 2
“Sanders, and many other politicians, also voted for the 2014 Farm Bill, which continues a long tradition of using taxpayer money to subsidize farms. These well-intentioned subsidies pay for programs like “crop insurance, disaster payments, and counter cyclical payments, to name a few (Simon, p. 79, 2013). Oddly enough, as Simon points out, two-thirds of these subsidies go to the very foods the USDA recommends we limit in our diets while only two percent of them support the production of fruit and vegetables, which the USDA recommends we eat more of. Simon estimates that the U.S. gives 38.4 billion dollars a year to the growers of crops (soy and corn) that ultimately go towards animal feed for meat and dairy production.”
Janae Dimick, And This Little Piggy Had None; Challenging the Dominant Discourse on Farmed Animals in Children's Picturebooks
“The author argues that children’s books that feature animals often exclude farmed animals, do not discuss animal rights, and focus primarily on companion, exotic or endangered animals (much like I discovered in my own research in the bookstores). This focus does not challenge the status quo, but it does reinforce numerous values that our society currently attaches to animals.”
Janae Dimick, And This Little Piggy Had None; Challenging the Dominant Discourse on Farmed Animals in Children's Picturebooks