Kill All the Chickens

Regular price €31.99
Quantity:
Will Deliver When Available
Will Deliver When Available
14 days return policy Shipping & Delivery
A01=Amy Olberding
attachment
Author_Amy Olberding
books about the Ozarks
books about the south
books about the southern working-classes
books by Amy Olberding
books on contemporary philosophy
books on the philosophy of loss
Category=QDT
dependency
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
family farms
forthcoming
grief as confusion
human finitude
limitedness of human life
limits of philosophy
philosophy of bereavement
philosophy of grief
unconventional philosophy

Product details

  • ISBN 9781509575442
  • Publication Date: 24 Jul 2026
  • Publisher: Polity Press
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
Secure checkout Fast Shipping Easy returns

As a philosopher, Amy Olberding is trained to wrestle with abstraction. But when she takes over her ancestral family farm in the Ozarks, her experience turns far more earthy. Her double life in philosophy and farming worked well enough, for a time. But then she tried to write a philosophy book about grief.

Olberding's profession prepared her to write a scholarly book, but left her ill-equipped to do so among the haunting traces of her ancestors: the grandfather who could fix anything, the uncle who cautioned against letting your brains show, and the grandmother who once had all her chickens killed to conceal her hillbilly origins. Like her grandmother, Olberding was adept at killing chickens, at least metaphorically, taking on the marks of class and education expected of professors. But her efforts to write dispassionately about grief from a farm populated with family ghosts quickly foundered. Instead, Olberding presents a lyrical mosaic that refuses to shy away from the acute confusions that come with loss. Insistently joining farm life to learning and Ozark ancestors to philosophers, Olberding offers evocative meditations on community and tradition, the contradictions of mental and manual labor, the worlds of urbane airs and country speech, and describes a life of the mind slowly giving way to raw experience.

Kill All the Chickens is the book you get when loss is less a problem to solve than a place where you live. Most of all, it is an effort to revive some chickens, to let the earthy stuff of sorrow sometimes mess up the cleaner wisdoms philosophy might offer.

Amy Olberding is, for a little while longer, Presidential Professor of Philosophy at the University of Oklahoma. She lives on her family's farm in the southern Missouri Ozarks with her husband, her dog, and too many groundhogs.

More from this author