Louise's Reviews > Eating Animals

Eating Animals by Jonathan Safran Foer

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2450538
's review
Dec 25, 09

bookshelves: non-fiction, food
Read in December, 2009

What could have been an informative, decent book on animal welfare and the environmental impact of our current factory farming system is marred by the author's need to be clever and add some unconventional pages to his book. I ended up just glossing past those pages. There's no doubt that Jonathan Safran Foer has done his research on the USDA, large slaughterhouses, major factory farms, and smaller back-to-old-fashioned-husbandry farmers. All this information is valuable to make an informed decision on whether or not eating animals is worth it.

Anyone who has been even remotely curious about what goes on in factory farms need only look it up on the internet to discover the atrocities that go on inside those large buildings. The passages in this book bring nothing new to that table other than some specific stories and first hand accounts. What it does bring is the fact that animal suffering isn't an exception in this system, it's the norm -- something that most people don't realize. But the book isn't all doom and blood. There are also some more positive stories of small-scale farmers who do things differently and keep animal welfare more in mind than say, the supplier to KFC does.

One thing I really enjoyed in the book were the italicized chapters which I assume were written by the different people Foer talked to about farming. It was nice to have different voices and views of factory farming but one thing all small farmers agreed on (according to this book) was that our current system of factory farming not only is harmful to the environment and the health of people directly involved in it, but it's just not going to be sustainable. After reading so many pages of animal suffering and cruelty, it was a breath of fresh air to read about farmers who have made it possible for animals to have a relatively stress-free, almost happy life before being sacrificed to slaughter.

The fight against animal cruelty is something that almost anyone can get behind, but Foer also illuminates something that mainly pulls me from becoming vegetarian: tradition and family. He includes anecdotes of his own family, from his childhood and to his adulthood which influenced his choice to become a vegetarian. I'm glad that someone finally made a point that vegetarianism isn't a decision primarily made because of ethics, but also culture.

While Foer personally has chosen an animal-free diet as opposed to being a selective omnivore, and what he writes contains his bias around it, reading the book did not change my food habits that drastically, so one needn't be afraid of reading this book. Sure, parts are graphic, and maybe I'm just desensitized, but I read most of this book chowing down on beef noodle soup. Even the most vehement self-proclaimed carnivore should read this book just to understand what kind of industry they're supporting by choosing to eat meat.

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Reading Progress

12/17/2009 page 44
12.9% "The previous chapter was annoying and pointless."
12/23/2009 page 120
35.19% "I like the italicized chapters more than the "experimental" ones."
12/25/2009 page 400
100% "It tends to get repetitive toward the end."

Comments (showing 1-2 of 2) (2 new)

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Louise I know not to judge a book by its cover, yadda yadda, but this cover really bothers me in a "Oooh look at me, I'm so in your face and hip" way.


message 2: by Rachel (last edited Jan 04, 2010 01:15pm) (new) - rated it 4 stars

Rachel Louise, even if you want to keep on eating meat for culture's sake, I'm glad you read this book and further informed yourself, and that it got you thinking.

I know what you mean about culture influencing people's desire to NOT BE vegetarian. One thing I noticed, seems like family members are the worst when it comes to ridiculing vegetarians. It's strange because you'd think family members would care about you and want to respect you and your beliefs more than just a random person on the street.

No doubt, part of the reason family members are so hostile to new vegetarians is that some people see vegetarianism as a rejection of the ideals that we grew up with. Food is such a big part of culture, and vegetarianism seems to reject the food we were served by our families across the generations.

I like what JSF had in the book about adapting our cultural traditions to be centered around vegetarian feasts. Chinese food, Mexican food, American comfort food, German food, Lousiana Cajun food, it can all be made in vegetarian versions and still feel "cultural." Sure, it's not going to be the exact same thing, and some things will be downright missing (fried egg on top of bi-bim-bap I think of as an example), but that doesn't mean the remaining plant-based foods won't feel cultural (bi-bim-bap without the egg on top still tastes very Korean and VERY GOOD!).

Although it at first it might *seem* like Thanksgiving isn't Thanksgiving without the turkey, my experience is that a turkey-free plate on Thanksgiving is quite abundant and filling, and there's no feeling of something missing. I'm of the opinion that we can definitely continue our festive cultural traditions without meat.

However ... culture is still a big factor. My boyfriend is Chinese and his parents think I'm crazy for being vegan. He loves vegan food and eats mostly vegan at our house and when we go out at restaurants. However, when his family is around, it's like he has to eat all this meat to prove that my vegetarianism has not rubbed off on him. His parents are always questioning him about it and making sure he is still eating meat. So yeah ... culture and families. It's a big deal.



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