Tuesday, January 21, 2014

TOW #16: IRB- Eating Animals


In Jonathan Safran Foer’s Eating Animals, he continues his investigation of the food industry and tries to promote the idea that having a carnivorous diet might not seem as great as it does if you are ignorant to what truly happens in the food process. One chapter focuses on the environment, which clearly supports the idea that eating animals is not helpful due to the environment. It was quite intriguing reading this investigation due to the fact that the statistics were indeed strong and supporting, in addition to the spurts of humor that kept the reader from dozing off while reading about the food process.
Toward the end of the text, tied together his investigation and applying it to how it affects the average person. Until this point in his text, he has explained the issues of the food industry but not it directly affects those readers who would reply, “who cares?” With the use of a metaphor throughout an entire chapter, he transforms the dinner table for eating into a globe for the reader to visualize every person in the world dining at one location, including the pathways each bit of our food undergoes until it reaches our plates. With the use of such figurative language, Foer is successful in achieving his purpose due to the fact that he allows the reader to accept the investigating and also the reasoning to which it affects them; therefore, Foer not only addresses a problem in our society, but how it affects the reader in the long run. In my opinion, Foer successfully achieved his purpose with the devices of figurative language to tie everything “unclear” to the reader with mundane terms, in addition to using humor to keep the audience focused through the explanation of Foer’s investigation.
I would recommend this book to any reader, especially because this book was written for any reader in particular because the food process affects us all. I think it was both interesting and quite interesting because I didn’t realize there were so many issues with the food we eat regularly. 



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