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Making/Meat/Matter

Title:

Making/Meat/Matter

Kenefick, Alexandra ORCID: https://orcid.org/0009-0009-4355-762X (2024) Making/Meat/Matter. PhD thesis, Concordia University.

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Abstract

Making/Meat/Matter critiques the intersections of modernity, coloniality, and design within industrial animal-agriculture, exposing how Western ideologies drive exploitative practices that commodify both human and non-human life. This interdisciplinary thesis reveals how industrial systems perpetuate environmental degradation, inequality, and violence by reducing animals to resources and marginalizing communities within capitalist frameworks. Using Design Justice frameworks and ecofeminist theories, it advocates for ethical multispecies coexistence, sustainability, and social equity.
The thesis comprises two parts: Part I explores the historical and philosophical foundations of modernity, and its ties to colonial exploitation and industrial agriculture. It challenges the anthropocentric logic behind Western systems and their ecological harms. Part II translates these critiques into a design, a tabletop game called Making/Meat/Matter, which encourages players to examine industrial food systems and the ethical issues within.
This research-creation project bridges theory and practice by integrating design, sociology, marketing, and food studies to challenge entrenched systems and promote sustainable alternatives. By uniting these disciplines, Making/Meat/Matter positions design as a vehicle for interdisciplinary inquiry, using creative tools to engage with complex issues of identity, power, and ethical consumption. This synthesis expands the conversation on how design, when interwoven with diverse fields, can address contemporary social and environmental crises in industrial agriculture, food systems, and beyond.

Divisions:Concordia University > School of Graduate Studies > Individualized Program
Item Type:Thesis (PhD)
Authors:Kenefick, Alexandra
Institution:Concordia University
Degree Name:Ph. D.
Program:Individualized Program
Date:29 October 2024
Thesis Supervisor(s):Watson, Mark and Lebel, Jordan
Keywords:Industrial Animal Agriculture, Coloniality and Modernity, Meat as Design, Food Systems, Industrialization and Ethics, Sociocultural Food Studies, Meat Production and Power, Environmental Sustainability, Design and Sociology, Intersectionality in Food Systems, Game-Based Research, Communication Design, Serious Games, Research-Creation, Experiential Learning, Systems Thinking in Design, Design and Pedagogy, Autoethnography
ID Code:994991
Deposited By: Alexandra Kenefick
Deposited On:17 Jun 2025 14:19
Last Modified:17 Jun 2025 14:19
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