The Omnivore's Dilemma

The Omnivore’s Dilemma
Author Michael Pollan
Language English
Publisher The Penguin Press
Publication date
2006
ISBN 978-1-59420-082-3
OCLC 62290639
394.1/2 22
LC Class GT2850 .P65 2006
Preceded by The Botany of Desire
Followed by In Defense of Food

The Omnivore's Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals is a nonfiction book by Michael Pollan published in 2006. In the book, Pollan asks the seemingly straightforward question of what we should have for dinner. As omnivores, the most unselective eaters, humans are faced with a wide variety of food choices, resulting in a dilemma. Pollan suggests that, prior to modern food preservation and transportation technologies, this particular dilemma was resolved primarily through cultural influences. These technologies have recreated the dilemma, by making available foods that were previously seasonal or regional. The relationship between food and society, once moderated by culture, now finds itself confused. To learn more about those choices, Pollan follows each of the food chains that sustain us; industrial food, organic food, and food we forage ourselves; from the source to a final meal, and in the process writes a critique of the American way of eating.

Summary

Noting that corn is the most heavily subsidized U.S. crop, Pollan posits that it has successfully changed the U.S. diet and animals diet. In the first section, he monitors the development of a calf from a pasture in South Dakota through its stay on a Kansas feedlot to its end. The author highlights that of all stuff feedlot cows eat, the most damaging is corn, which tends to damage their livers. Corn-fed cows become sick as a matter of course, a fact accepted by the industry as a cost of doing business.

In the second section, Pollan describes the large-scale farms and food-processing outfits that largely satisfy surging demand for organic food, using Whole Foods as a proxy. The author aims to demonstrate that, despite the group's rhetoric, the virtues on sale often prove spectral. The “free-range” chicken on offer, it turns out, hails from a confinement operation with a tiny yard, largely unused by the short-lived birds. Pollan also accuses large-scale organic agriculture of “floating on a sinking sea of petroleum” by analysing that a one-pound box of California-produced organic lettuce - that contains 80 food calories - requires 4,600 calories of fossil fuel to process and ship to the East Coast. He adds that the figure would be only “about 4 percent higher if the salad were grown conventionally.” One of Pollan's major arguments about the organic farming industry is that it creates an unrealistic pastoral narrative, giving people the false idea that, by definition, organic products come from picturesque open pastures.

In contrast to the large-scale organic food, Pollan presents in the third section Joel Salatin, a farmer who runs a successful midsized, multispecies meat farm in Virginia end insists on selling his goods close by and relying on his family and a few interns to supplement his labor.

The final section finds Pollan attempting to prepare a meal using only ingredients he has hunted, gathered, or grown himself. He recruits assistance from local foodies, who teach him to hunt feral pigs, gather wild mushrooms and search for abalone. He also makes a salad of greens from his own garden, bakes sourdough bread using wild yeast, and prepares a dessert from cherries picked in his neighborhood.

Pollan concludes that the fast food meal and the hunter-gatherer meal are "equally unreal and equally unsustainable."[1] He believes that if we were once again aware of the source of our food what it was, where it came from, how it traveled to reach us, and its true cost we would see that we "eat by the grace of nature, not industry."[1]

Reception

Economist Tyler Cowen argued, "The problems with Pollan's 'self-financed' meal reflect the major shortcoming of the book: He focuses on what is before his eyes but neglects the macro perspective of the economist. He wants to make the costs of various foods transparent, but this is an unattainable ideal, given the interconnectedness of markets."[2]

Washington State University, situated in an agricultural area of Washington state, chose this book to be part of its freshman reading program in 2009, but soon canceled the program. Many in the university's community, including those who run the kinds of industrial farms that The Omnivore's Dilemma discusses, were unhappy with the selection, and speculation was that the cancellation was a result of political pressure. Elson Floyd, president of WSU, claimed instead that it was a budgetary issue, and when food safety expert Bill Marler stepped up to cover the claimed shortfall, the program was reinstated, and Pollan was invited to speak on campus.[3]

Veganism

Pollan argues that to "give up" human consumption of animals would lead to a "food chain..even more dependent than it already is on fossil fuels and chemical fertilizers since food would need to travel even farther and fertility – in the form of manures – would be in short supply," given that, other than raising ruminants for human consumption, no viable alternatives exist according to Pollan in such grassy areas, for growing any grains or other plantfoods for human consumption.[1]

Honors

The New York Times named The Omnivore’s Dilemma one of the ten best books of 2006,[4] and Pollan was also the recipient of a James Beard Award for the work.[5] The book has also been published in a young reader's edition[6] and is being used in cross curricular lessons by teachers interested in promoting its message.[7]

See also

References

External links

Official

Essays

Interviews

Reviews

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