‘Rath’s superb study is a model of intrepid historical investigation, explanatory clarity, analytical acuity, and narrative grace. The stories of faked pig deaths, cattle hidden in volcanic craters, strychnine-filled syringes strapped to the hoods of jeeps, armed livestock inspectors, and deadly assaults on veterinarians make for compelling reading. However, in Rath’s hands, they also constitute the all-too-human evidence of the bio-political stakes of managing animals and germs and the fraught development of Mexico’s post-revolutionary ‘livestock state’.’
Raymond Craib - Cornell University
‘Through a national and transnational narrative centered on humans, animals, germs, and their interactions, Rath shows there was nothing ‘natural’ about the disease and shows instead how capitalism, state-making, diplomacy, and scientific debate shaped the reception, diffusion, and eventual demise of this dreaded plague. A remarkable and vastly researched work that pushes against conventional narratives of domination, coercion, and resistance in Mexico and beyond.’
Gema Kloppe-Santamaría - author of In the Vortex of Violence: Lynching, Extralegal Justice and the State in Post-Revolutionary Mexico
‘This book is a must-read for anyone interested in postwar US-Mexico relations, social mechanisms of opposition, resistance and negotiation, modernization and development. Through extensive research, Rath with clarity analyzes the aftosa campaign and ties together its effect on state formation, international relations and the ecology of animal-human coexistence.’
Elisa Servín - Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, Mexico
‘Rath’s story of cows and how to kill them is an extraordinary work. Told with verve, intelligence and a wry wit, it is an original meeting of political, environmental and new US imperial history. It also lays out - with clarity and style - the emergence of Mexico’s one-party state. One of the two or three most important books on mid-century Mexico.’
Benjamin T. Smith - author of The Dope: The Real History of the Mexican Drug Trade
‘… due to its merits and findings, the book will be of interest to scholars involved in the study of the agrarian, scientific, political, and environmental transformations of the Mexican countryside in the twentieth century.’
Netzahualco´yotl Luis Gutierrez
Source: Hispanic American Historical Review