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foul
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Journal Article
Agricultural History (2011) 85 (1): 114–115.
Published: 01 January 2011
...Nikki Berg Burin Foul Bodies: Cleanliness in Early America . By Kathleen M. Brown . NewHaven : Yale University Press , 2009 . 464 pp., $45.00 , hardback, ISBN 978-0-300-10618-3 . © the Agricultural History Society, 2011 2011 Agricultural History Winter Foul Bodies...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2022) 96 (1-2): 271–274.
Published: 01 May 2022
..., has not been for the better. Today the vast majority of hogs are raised in massive confinement facilities that foul the water and the air. Farmers buy their fertilizers in chemical form from off-farm sources. They now grow little, if anything, but corn and soybeans, becoming what my Iowa friends used...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2015) 89 (3): 469–470.
Published: 01 July 2015
... such as rattlesnakes infested barns and gardens. hookworm and other diseases beset children who ran outdoors barefoot. drought and fire were calamities for the entire farm family. urban children faced problems unique to the city. Waters were infected with sewage and the diseases it carried. industrial waste fouled...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2011) 85 (1): 115–116.
Published: 01 January 2011
... subjugation of Native American and African peoples. However, she also reveals how female-centered body work simultaneously constrained women by reinforcing the patriarchal structure of the Atlantic World. Some readers may find Foul Bodies intimidating because of its scope, length, and many details. However...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2015) 89 (3): 470–472.
Published: 01 July 2015
... and the diseases it carried. industrial waste fouled water and air. streetcars or trains could kill the freewheeling child. But urban landscapes also offered the thrill of playing in vacant lots, alleys, side streets, and areas undergoing development. indeed, despite the best efforts of reformers, children played...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2022) 96 (1-2): 262–266.
Published: 01 May 2022
.... At this point I expect some readers may cry foul. This talk of poetry seems the leading wedge of a leisured romanticism that celebrates its communion with some nature while countenancing the exploitation of people and other nature that made that leisure possible. It is a fair warning. Agricultural labor...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2011) 85 (1): 1–20.
Published: 01 January 2011
...-like game with many variations and many names among them, old cat, barn ball, round ball, and, most often, town ball. In most versions, the infield was square, with no foul lines or fixed positions in the field. Eight to fifteen men and sometimes as many as fifty played on each side...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2001) 75 (2): 217–241.
Published: 01 April 2001
... on the farm in this dry north." By the mid-1880s, Victoria's wheat fields, some of which had been cropped with? out a break since the early 1870s, were often so fouled with weeds that it was difficult to tell whether grain crops had been sown. Local newspapers teemed with advertisements for farm sales...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2013) 87 (4): 429–451.
Published: 01 October 2013
... because of the foule corrupcion that cometh of theym. This foul corruption was most likely the stench of the pigsties, which may be one reason that they were supposed to be cleaned out once a week. But such a blanket order to remove all pigs does not appear to have been successful in the long run...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2018) 92 (1): 78–100.
Published: 01 January 2018
... regarding bone dust. One commentator suggested that the anthrax bacillus might have spontaneously generated on unclean pastures: Is it not possible for us to breed our own anthrax bacilli? Have we not foul pasture and foul stockyards in the Waikato and other parts of New Zealand, and might we have...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2002) 76 (2): 272–288.
Published: 01 April 2002
...; it suffered from periodic algae blooms, which gave the water a foul taste and smell. When the irrigation system was redesigned after World War II, the Ralston reservoir was no longer needed to regulate flows. By that time, however, it had become so much a part of the environment of the flat that the USBR...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2000) 74 (2): 569–584.
Published: 01 April 2000
... the late 1960s expli- cated disturbing problems of swine confinement facilities: foul odors and vast wastes. By the mid 1990s, when these issues reached a crisis, the cele- bration of the hog industry finally came to a halt.25 Browntown, a Greene County working-class community of predomi- nantly African...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2006) 80 (4): 436–460.
Published: 01 October 2006
... uponthebenefactionsof Mrs.Watkinsinvolvingthechancellor'sresidence andthirtythousandacresof westernwheatlands.Sometimestheyturned to prairievegetationand Malin'sregretthat the prairieacreadjacentto the university'slibrarywas fouled by exoticinvadersA. few timesMalin discussedthe vagariesof...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2021) 95 (3): 414–443.
Published: 01 July 2021
... yielded potential profit, it also produced nuisances that were seen as a potential source of disease. In the nineteenth century when foul odors or miasmas were still believed to cause illness, the stenches from processing organic wastes raised alarms about public health.50 Residents who lived near...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2019) 93 (1): 68–101.
Published: 01 January 2019
... associated with urbanization, shifting gender roles and expectations, and environmental distress such as flooding, drought, erosion, reversion to scrub, and fouling of waterways.118 How much longer this persistent and resilient ideal can survive, however, is a moot question now that stock farming looks...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2016) 90 (2): 209–229.
Published: 01 April 2016
... America s Gibraltar: Muscle Shoals. Perhaps at no time before or since has an unbuilt fertilizer factory been limned in such a fanciful light as it was in this document.12 Many congressmen smelled something foul in the fertilizer plan. Conservatives were leery of expanding federal spending on such a large...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2011) 85 (3): 322–343.
Published: 01 July 2011
... admirable, their social differentiation necessary to order, and their cleanliness might serve as a Mirror to the finest Dames. Meanwhile, the unclean, disorderly, and foul-breathed beekeepers incited the bees wrath. Thorley echoed Butler and added his approval of the temperance and chastity prevailing...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2010) 84 (4): 451–478.
Published: 01 October 2010
.... By the second day, southern Democrats cried foul over theWest's hypocrisy and accused Republicans of trying to steal the proceeds of their public lands. In 1906Westerners had eschewed shar ing the reclamation fund during the fracas over Small's Dismal Swamp bill, but now they intended to benefit from other...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2012) 86 (3): 104–127.
Published: 01 July 2012
... to efficiently distribute harvest laborers, especially during years when foul weather and tight labor market conditions coincided with the harvest. Chavez concurred with growers that, union agricultural work is not like year-round factory work, which puts lots of pressure on the union to supply workers...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2005) 79 (3): 253–280.
Published: 01 July 2005
... of the Plains, homesteaders and small ranchers complained that a handful of wealthy individuals backed by foreign investors had seized more than their share of the public domain, by means both fair and foul. Likewise, Alberta farmers?or, more precisely, their advocates?attacked the per- ceived injustices...
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