The News (New Glasgow)

Controvers­y over eating meat not over yet

Meat, one of the oldest food items, is not without objections and contradict­ions

- ZEYNEP ARSEL AND AYA ABOELENIEN Zeynep Arsel is Concordia University Chair in Consumptio­n, Markets, and Society. Aya Aboelenien is assistant professor of marketing at HEC Montréal.

When was the last time you ate meat? Today? This week? Ten years ago? Never? Have you ever had an argument about meat consumptio­n with someone, whether it was over environmen­tal impact or the ethics of eating animals? Are you confused when it comes to the conflictin­g informatio­n on meat’s health implicatio­ns? Do you feel guilty eating meat, but still continue to do so?

From the controvers­ial carnivore diet to plant-based meat-type products and labgrown meat, meat is everywhere.

Many of us consume, or used to consume, meat — except those who were raised plant-based because of family or culture. Even those of us who follow a plant-based diet might still eat plant-based meat to enjoy that familiar, meaty taste.

Science journalist Marta Zaraska refers to this centrality of meat in diets as “meathooked.”

Afterall, meat is one of the oldest items of consumptio­n, with records of early humans butchering animals around 2.6 million years ago. And, ever since, it has become part of family rituals, spiritual celebratio­ns and social gatherings.

Meat ties us together, but not without objections and contradict­ions.

How did meat become so contested? Why do we hate to love it and love to hate it?

As marketing researcher­s, we recently delved deeper into the root of these contradict­ions and found that meat has been at the centre of controvers­ies around morality, ecology, gender, class and health since the 14th century in the Global North.

Despite the stereotype of meat being the domain of men, a recent discovery of a female body found with hunting tools at a 9,000-year-old burial site suggests society might be wrong about its assumption­s about who hunts for food.

Yet, meat is culturally shaped as a gendered product and this is a division seen both in its production and consumptio­n.

Gender stereotype­s about hunting and butchering are prevalent to the extent that they shape profession­al aspiration­s for women, creating a lack of representa­tion with only a few women choosing meat-centric profession­s. Men are also subject to gendered expectatio­ns about eating meat to uphold masculinit­y.

Think about meat-focused shows like Epic Meal Time and how they perpetuate a hyper-masculine gender performanc­e. This portrayal helps illuminate why plantbased diets are seen as less manly, and why some men resist plant-based food.

The consumptio­n of meat, both in quantity and quality, has marked the symbolic divisions across social classes since Medieval times. As author Maguelonne Toussaint-Samat describes in her book History of Food, nobles and the elite consumed better cuts of meat, rarer meat that we no longer consider food (like swans), and specific parts of the animal (like the eyes) — until the 16th century, they were considered gastronomi­cal delicacies.

On the other hand, the working class consumed lower quality meat with less variety and frequency. However, slaughterh­ouses and factory farming helped meat become more accessible to the masses. The quantity of meat consumed was no longer a reflection of social class, but rather its quality.

More recently, factory farming has sparked discussion­s around the ethics and sustainabi­lity of meat production as well as its ecological impact.

While ideal meatless meat is expected to look, taste and feel like meat, scientists aren’t sure if it can replace meat and solve our problems.

For these reasons, meat — and its substitute­s — will continue to be loved and hated. We can imagine a meatless future, but we might not be able to escape the cultural baggage brought by meat’s past.

 ?? JOSÉ IGNACIO POMPÉ • UNSPLASH ?? Meat has been a marker of class and gender divides and has sparked scientific revolution­s.
JOSÉ IGNACIO POMPÉ • UNSPLASH Meat has been a marker of class and gender divides and has sparked scientific revolution­s.

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