Food Class Warfare By Tracie Mcmillan's Context

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In her essay, “Food’s Class Warfare,” author Tracie McMillan promotes the inclusion of both “individual changes and structural ones” (217), particularly “class consciousness” (217), in the fight for quality diets in America. She reveals the most common sides of the healthy food debate as the inherent “just-buy-better stuff logic” (215) and the opposing “structural challenges of eating well” (215). The main strategies for defeating the American “obesity epidemic” (216) have been reaching out to the individual, as well as changing the structure of the American food system itself. The favorite concept for structuralists is “food deserts - neighborhoods with insufficient grocery stores and thus insufficient supplies of healthy food” (216). She deems the concept insufficient in practice, as it ignores smaller markets and equates large stores with a healthy food source. While the individual viewpoint and structuralists argue with each other, they share common ideals. According to …show more content…

Near the end of her essay, McMillan implies that the “lines of an absolute...are typically drawn, somewhat laboriously, around the elephant in the room: economic class” (217). I expect more information after being pulled in like that, but she immediately transitions into her solution proposals instead of exploring the issue behind class. She lightly touches on the different food spending of the rich and poor, but I am still curious. She also seems to jump right back into the “two sides” (217) after changing my train of thought. Her brief mention of class issues is distracting, especially since it is so short-lived and placed right in the middle of what could have been a continuous stream of thought. Also, the title suggests that her essay is about class warfare, but she fails to properly illustrate that aspect of the food debate. Perhaps her slight hints throughout the essay are supposed to be enough, but I remain unsure of her

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