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Rise Of Industrial Food By Michael Pollan

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Rise of Industrial Food
People’s ability to assess certain courses of action brings about two distinct paths: it either hinders the person’s ability to gauge their surroundings or it enables them to see and act based on a completely new perspective. It is our seemingly competent nature, as generalists, that has led to the rise of the phenomenon known as the “national eating disorder.” Skewing food culture and trend patterns, we have come to trust in our natural aptitude for survival as a way to pave our way through sustaining nourishment while coming into terms with the opportunity costs that accompany all of our decisions. There is something about food that grabs people; it is the individual tastes and textures, the unique stories of each and every ingredient that is used to make food, and the smell of spices that brings familiarity that …show more content…

Michael Pollan’s Omnivore’s Dilemma breaches the topics of culture and its effects on nature through the notions of food, most notably their effects on the environment. Through the usage of descriptive language and rhetorical terms, Pollan is able to engage with the reader by disassembling the history, the morality, and the ethics that surrounds the start, and continuous growth, of the industrial food empire. Pollan begins by recounting a memory of the time his family joined him to go eat at McDonald’s. By using authorial sovereignty to describe the event, Pollan is able to simply present the story as background (but nonetheless important), setting to the present issue he is trying to establish to the reader. His statement “myriad streams of commodity corn, after being variously processed and turned into meat (Pollan, pg. 109)”

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