Book Review: 'Technological Eating'

Similar documents
AP World History (Povletich) CHAPTER 30 OUTLINE The Making of Industrial Society

The Making of Industrial Society (Bentley - Chapter 30)

Opinion-based essays: prompts and sample answers

VICTORIA JUNIOR COLLEGE JC2 PRELIMINARY EXAMINATION

AP World History (Povletich) CHAPTER 30 OUTLINE The Making of Industrial Society

Chapter 16 Section 1: Railroads Lead the Way

Getting ready to go. Workbook 2. My money

AP European History Chapter 22: The Revolution in Energy and Industry

Chapter 12, Section 1 The Industrial Revolution in America

The invention of new machines in Great Britain led to the beginning of the Industrial

The Making of Industrial Society. Chapter 30

Support Needs Questionnaire

7 th Grade Social Studies Common Final Exam (CFE) Jeopardy Review Game

Industrialization Presentation

Year 6: Autumn Term: Mayan civilisation: Inspiration, drought and destruction! What can we learn from the Maya people?

- CENTRAL HISTORICAL QUESTION(S) - WHY DID THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION BEGIN IN GREAT BRITAIN?

The Industrial Revolution in England

WORKSHOP SERIES: Community Networks in partnership with APC, Zenzeleni, Mesh Bukavu & TunapandaNET

Chapter 5 Notes: The Industrial Age. The railroad system expanded rapidly in the late 1800s, building large fortunes for some wealthy businesspeople.

The Industrial Revolution

Module 2: Origin of city in history Lecture 8: The Industrial Revolution and the Rise of the Gesellschaft Part I

Industrialisation. Industrial processes. Industrialisation in developing countries. D Mining in Namibia. Textile in Namibia

LET US TAKE TIME FOR NEW VISTAS. January 9, This year Chapter BA here in Houston, Texas, has as its general theme for

Big Business and Organized Labor. Chapter 18, Section 2

The Development Process and the Design Changes of Modern Household Objects in Britain and Japan: Modernization of Some Heat-Related Products

Industrialization Spreads Close Read

Excelling. throughh life. Empathy for others

Railroads and Rise of Big Business. Age. Transcontinental Railroad. Term coined by

Comics as Contracts 2016/04/05 1

Book review: Profit and gift in the digital economy

The paradox of standardisation and innovation

Background Key point:

Factories and Workers

Annual Shareholders' Meeting. Stuttgart May 14th 2009

A packet of breakfast cereal contains these ingredients:

Chapter 13 Section Review Packet

The Industrial Revolution

ENGAGE ENLIGHTEN EMPOWER

John D. Rockefeller. Net Worth: $318 billion. A short history of John D. Rockefeller

Scenario Planning edition 2

RESEARCHES ON QUALITY MANAGEMENT IN THE FIELD OF KNITWEAR INDUSTRY

Use only <, 5 or >. a b c d (25)

1.6 Paraphrasing. 1 The elements of effective paraphrasing

The World in the future: Megatrends and innovation

STEFAN RISTHAUS. A game by. for 2 4 players. 12 years and up

UWE has obtained warranties from all depositors as to their title in the material deposited and as to their right to deposit such material.

Thorstein Bunde Veblen

Planning Activity. Theme 1

Dinamika Sistem Industri di Era Industri 4.0 dan Pengaruhnya terhadap Sektor Industri Makanan dan Minuman

Draft Recommendation concerning the Protection and Promotion of Museums, their Diversity and their Role in Society

Assessment: Life in Medieval Towns

SMU Convocation Address by Victor K. Fung 12 August Preparing for an Era of Great Global Transformations

Productivity Pixie Dust

Section 13-1: The Industrial Revolution and America

Part I. General issues in cultural economics

EC Chapter 1. Burak Alparslan Eroğlu. October 13, Burak Alparslan Eroğlu EC Chapter 1

Achieving Work-Life Balance Teleseminar. By: Brian Tracy. June 24 th, 2008

Robber Barons vs. Captains of Industry

A N A N I L - T. begins me. change with. Towards Mindful Consumption F O M C A

The Process of Change: Can We Make a Difference? 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.

Innovation during the Industrial Revolution

Macroeconomics: Principles, Applications, and Tools

Ratio. Worksheet 1 Finding Ratio. Complete the number bonds Complete the models. 5. Reteach 5A

Welcome to Class! R5Vf3lpPac

Big Businesses, Technology, and Labor Unions. Unit 6 SSUSH11

Causes & Impact of Industrialization

Digital Garment Decorating OVERVIEW

CAPITALISM, TECHNOLOGY AND A GREEN GLOBAL GOLDEN AGE: The Role of History in Helping to Shape the Future

What are the benefits of palm wax?

Why execution is everything in modern Australian infrastructure projects

Design, development and technology. Shashank Mehta National Institute of Design

Industrialization and Urbanization

Sociology Semester ! Sociology 100 Issues and Themes in Sociology

CITY PROFILE TERRASSA

Ratio. Worksheet 1 Finding Ratio. Complete the number bonds Complete the models. 5. Reteach 5A

Unit 6: Development of an Industrial United States ( ) Part 2: The Rise of Big Business in America

3 BANKNOTES AND COINS 3.1 THE CIRCULATION OF EURO BANKNOTES AND COINS AND THE HANDLING OF CURRENCY

AIM: Was big business helpful or hurtful to America?

DBQ Han and Roman View of Technology Anderson s Copy With Notes

Compendium Overview. By John Hagel and John Seely Brown

Overview Game Roles. Manufacturer. Hub Operator. Retailer. Mayor 2

Objectives ECONOMIC GROWTH CHAPTER

The Making of Industrial Society

TECHNICAL AND PROGRAMMATIC PROBLEMS AND WAYS TO DEVELOP QUALITY AND PRODUCTION OF SOFTWARE SYSTEMS IN THIRD WORLD COUNTRIES

their members had on political power in many parts of Europe.

Ping Xu, Qiushi Zhang, Zhihong Zhu. Northeast Petroleum University, Daqing, China

Women s Contributions to family Businesses in Mid-19 th Century Massachusetts. Work-in-Progress November, 11, 2017

I look forward to having a fun and successful AVON Party with you! Sincerely,

NEW ENGLAND COMMON ASSESSMENT PROGRAM

STRAND: PROBABILITY Unit 2 Probability of Two or More Events

R Distribution Transformers. Mineral Oil-Immersed, Self-Cooled, 60 Hertz Voltages and Connections. Reference Data

A : (3) : 11:45

The Digital Divide. Factors that contribute towards widening the digital divide gap: Poverty. Education

Supplement to: Fielding-Singh, Priya A Taste of Inequality: Food s Symbolic Value across the Socioeconomic Spectrum. Sociological Science 4:

Chapter 30: Game Theory

AP World History. Sample Student Responses and Scoring Commentary. Inside: Short Answer Question 3. Scoring Guideline.

Outcomes StarTM. Not for use. Sample for information only. Want to use this tool? Visit

WHY FLUENCY IN VALUES MATTERS AT SCHOOL. by ROSEMARY DEWAN, CEO Human Values Foundation

Egypt The Rising Star for Textile Business

Study questions for the Textile Manufacturing section

Transcription:

Book Review: 'Technological Eating' Uniformity & Convenience 'Technological Eating', by Magnus Pyke (John Murray 2.50) Page 1 of 5

Ever since capitalism became, towards the end of the nineteenth century, the dominant world economic system it has fashioned the world in its own image. Local traditions and culture have, in the main, been unable to withstand the onslaught of the money/commodity system. Backed by technological. economic and military superiority the developed nations of Europe and North America have imposed their values and traditions upon 'primitive' communities. Mass production methods needing standardisation and uniformity of product and production method have led to a depressing uniformity of world working class lifestyles. Scientific technology has de-tribalised society. Coca-Cola culture has triumphed. Page 2 of 5

In this short, very readable, book Professor Pyke argues that the areas in which technological developments have had the greatest impact on our everyday lives have been those relating to food what we eat and how and when we eat it. This aspect of social experience and behaviour has been and will continue to be influenced by evolutions in food technology. "Food plays a central part in social life and the rapid progress of food technology in exercising a more profound influence on the social scene than has so far been recognised". The book develops this theme showing how in a modern industrial society different parts of the world grow more and more alike. Having destroyed the tribal communist societies of West Africa in the search for raw materials, in this case palm oil which through the process of hydrogenation could be used for making margarine, capitalism replaced it with the plantation system introducing money values and drawing the local inhabitants into the world economy. Financial empires were built up out of what had formerly been jungle. Refrigeration techniques enabled the United Fruit Company to exploit tropical plants such as the banana on a massive scale "not primarily for the benefit of the citizens of the area but for entirely separate social groups, United States businessmen". In the metropolitan countries the same technology, put to the same purpose, brought about the retail revolution which converted the shopkeeper craftsman into a wage worker in a supermarket. This new method of shopping is more impersonal, less of an occasion for social contact and discussion more like a factory in fact. The author looks forward to the possible eventual superseding of the supermarket by the "Cash and Carry" depot possibly delivering food for the winter to the family deep freezer. The less well off members of society presumably having to rely on the few remaining small "corner shops". New products appear on supermarket shelves at the rate of one a week. The successful ones being those which most satisfactorily fulfil an already existing need. Thus breakfast cereals such as cornflakes, developed by Seventh Day Adventists as a "morally neutral" food, transformed breakfast from being a major meal of the day into one which each member of a family can partake individually in their own time. The whole range of "convenience foods" which can be prepared quickly and with a minimum of fuss, frees a large section of the population (mainly women) to do other things. In the money dominated society of buying and selling this tends to be going out to work to get the money to buy the refrigerators or deep freezers in which to store the frozen convenience foods. This tendency is likely to grow. The changing needs of capital will make mincemeat of old, trusted and respected institutions such as the family. In perhaps the most provocative chapter in the book entitled "The Disappearance of Mealtimes" the author argues that the shared family meal is under great pressure. Already large numbers of children eat the main meal of the day in school dining rooms as their parents eat theirs in office or factory canteens. As parents are forced by social and economic pressures to go out to work, and as food technology increasingly makes it possible for children to eat without having to go home then the fabric of social relationships is bound to change. "In a society such as our own in which primary importance is attached to economic cost and money value, there is likely to be a further advance in food technology bringing with it further influences on social organisation." Whether this is a good thing or not is a moot point, but what is clear is that, as in the past, if it proves to be profitable we will have it whether we like it or not. Technology in general and food technology in particular are inextricably intermingled with the philosophy of money value, which permeates western society. While the quality of life may be improved by the ample provision of sophisticated, prepacked foods and the avoidance of drudgery... there is also a social price to be paid. The emotional impact of a row of vending machines from which the diverse articles can only be obtained by the introduction of the appropriate coin must be different from that received in the course of a family meal... Within an industrial society such as our own, the powerful and persuasive influence of economics the subject in which human desires Page 3 of 5

are provided with a single index number, their price is particularly apparent when we come to consider manufactured foods. Baked beans anyone? Gwynn Thomas Tuesday, 1 August 1972 Page 4 of 5

Source URL: http://www.worldsocialism.org/spgb/socialiststandard/1970s/1972/no-816-august-1972/book-review-technological-eating Page 5 of 5