Difference between revisions of "Philosophy of Food Reading Schedule"

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==SEP 18: 1 ==
 
 
==JAN 19==
 
  
 
:*First Day of Class:  See in class notes for details.
 
:*First Day of Class:  See in class notes for details.
  
==JAN 24==
+
==SEP 20: 2 ==
  
'''Overview of Course Units'''
+
:* View: [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1286537/ Food, Inc.] &  (Recommended) [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2381335/?ref_=nv_sr_1 Fed Up]
  
:*Reading/ViewingFood, Inc, Fed Up, or Cowspiracy; Nestle, "Introduction: The Food Industry and 'Eat More,' from ''Food Politics''", 2013. (1-27).  
+
::*Focus: These mainstream and well-regarded documentaries will quickly put a critique of the US Food System on the table.  Check movie availability. Take some notes on: 1. Facts that you are surprised by, think important, or are suspicious of.; 2. Questions raised by the movie; 3. Claims or thesis that the movie's documentary evidence seems to support.  Note segments or narratives. Try to note some names.
  
::*Focus: These documentaries and Nestle's Introduction will quickly put a critique of the US Food System on the table.  For the movies, you should each select at least one movie to view (all are on you tube and Netflix, at least one is on Kanopy (through Foley)).  Take some notes on: 1.  Facts that you are surprised by, think important, or are suspicious of.;  2. Questions raised by the movie; 3. Claims or thesis that the movie's documentary evidence seems to support. 
+
==SEP 25: 3 ==
  
==JAN 26==
+
:*Gastropod episode, "The End of the Calorie"
 +
:*Andrews, Geoff. Chapter 2: "The Critique of 'Fast Life'" ''The Slow Food Story'' (pp. 29-47).
  
:*Reading: Montanari, Massimo. Food is Culture, (1-26). Pollan, Michael. Part 1: "In the Age of Nutritionism," In Defense of Food: An Eater's Manifesto (pp. 19-40).  
+
::*Focus: The Gastropod episode will give you alot of information about the way the "calorie" came about as a unit of measurement and the complexity of measuring food energy.  Andrews give you an introduction to the Slow Food Movement, which is still very prominent in Italy.  
  
::*Focus: Montanari takes us quickly into the intersection of history, anthropology, and philosophy of food by situating food as primordial culture.  Pollan gives us a quick introduction to "nutritionism" -- the idea that food just is nutrition, along with some analysis of the problems of nutrition science and nutrition policy. We'll read the rest of his analysis and recommendations in the first unit of the course.
+
==SEP 27: 4 ==
  
==JAN 31==
+
:*Sonnenbergs, C 1, "What is the Microbiota and Why Should I Care?"
  
:*Reading: Pollan, Michael. Part 1: "In the Age of Nutritionism," In Defense of Food: An Eater's Manifesto (pp. 40-81. Gopnik, Adam, "Who Made the Restaurant?" from The Table Comes First, 2012, (1-32). Montanari, "Fire, Cooking, Cuisine, Civilization" (29-33) from Food is Culture.  
+
:*Recommended: View one of these gut movies:
 +
::*[https://login.proxy.foley.gonzaga.edu/login?url=http://fod.infobase.com/PortalPlaylists.aspx?wID=16149&xtid=94805 Medical Revolution The Gut Microbiome]
 +
::*[https://www.amazon.com/Gut-Our-Second-Brain/dp/B01GKTCP4I The Gut: Our Second Brain]  -- Please do try to watch this one. It has some remarkable graphics and the science reporting is very good as well.
  
::*Focus: Gastronomy is the study of food taste and satisfaction at the level of both plate and culture. We will look at some quintessential moments in the history of gastronomy, such as the birth of the restaurant, but also discuss contemporary gastronomic growth in coffee culture and beer culture.
+
==OCT 2: 5 ==
  
==FEB 2==
+
:*Sonnenbergs, C 5, "Trillions of Mouths to Feed"
 +
:*Recommended: Sonnenbergs, C 7, "Eat Sh*t and Live"
 +
:*Montanari, Massimo. Food is Culture, (1-26).
  
:*Reading: Gopnik, Adam, "Who Made the Restaurant?" from The Table Comes First, 2012, (32-57). Singer, Peter, & Mason, Jim. Chapter 18: "What Should We Eat?" (pp. 270-285): Rodale. There are legions of ethical and social justice issues in food. This chapter gives you an overview of the sorts of ethical problems connected with the production and consumption of food.
+
::*Focus: Montanari takes us quickly into the intersection of history, anthropology, and philosophy of food by situating food as primordial culture.  
  
::*Focus: There are legions of ethical and social justice issues in food. This chapter gives you an overview of the sorts of ethical problems connected with the production and consumption of food.
 
  
==FEB 7==
+
==OCT 4: 6 ==
  
'''US Food System and Food Politics'''
+
:*Pollan, Michael. Part 1: "In the Age of Nutritionism," In Defense of Food: An Eater's Manifesto (pp. 19-40).
 +
:*Recommended: Diamond, "Agriculture's Mixed Blessings"
 +
:*Montanari, "Fire, Cooking, Cuisine, Civilization" (29-33) from Food is Culture.
  
:*Reading: Pollan, Michael. Part 2: The Western Diet (pp. 83-132); Recommended (not for quiz): Nestle, Marion. Chapter 1: From "Eat More" to "Eat Less" 1900-1990 (pp. 31-50).
+
::*Focus: Pollan gives us a quick introduction to "nutritionism" -- the idea that food just is nutrition, along with some analysis of the problems of nutrition science and nutrition policy. We'll read the rest of his analysis and recommendations in the first unit of the course.
  
::*Focus: Part 2 of Pollan's book focuses on the most important evidence that we have about the diseases of the Western Diet, the epidemiological evidence.  The story of taking aboriginal people of a Western diet, Weston Price's pioneering "ecological" approach and a review of food related diseases are all important.  Track the major ways that food is degraded by industrial processes.
+
==OCT 9: 7 ==
  
==FEB 9==
+
:*Barber, Dan. Introduction ''The Third Plate: Field Notes on the Future of Food,'' (1-22).
 +
:*Nestle, "Introduction: The Food Industry and 'Eat More,' from ''Food Politics''", 2013. (1-30).
  
:*Reading: Pollan, Michael. Part 3: Getting Over Nutritionism: In Defense of Food: An Eater's Manifesto (pp. 139-170); Nestle, Marion. Chapter 2: Politics Versus Science -- opposing the food pyramind, 1991-1992 (pp. 51-66).
+
==OCT 11: 8==
  
::*Focus:
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:*Pollan, Michael. Part 2: The Western Diet (pp. 83-136)
  
==FEB 14==
+
==OCT 16: 9 ==
  
:*Visit from Jenny van Cott, Pantry Fuel
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:*Nestle, Marion. Chapter 1: From "Eat More" to "Eat Less" 1900-1990 (pp. 31-50).
:*Reading: Pollan, Michael. Part 3: Getting Over Nutritionism: In Defense of Food: An Eater's Manifesto (pp. 170-201); Zepeda, Lydia. Carving Values with a Spoon Food and Philosophy (pp. 31-43).  
+
:*Nestle, Marion. Chapter 2, Politics Versus Science -- opposing the food pyramind, 1991-1992 (pp. 51-66).
  
::*Focus: Zepeda offers a more general reflection on the US Food system than we've had so far.  Note the difference between energy-dense and nutrient dense.  Track Pollan's "eating algorithms"
 
  
==FEB 16==
+
==OCT 18: 10 ==
  
'''Food Culture and History'''
+
:*Moss, Michael. Chapter 4, "Is it Cereal or Candy," Salt Sugar Fat. (pp. 68-93)
 +
:*Zepeda, Lydia. Carving Values with a Spoon.  Food and Philosophy (pp. 31-43).
  
:*Reading: Montgomery, David. Chapter 2: "Skin of the Earth" ''Dirt: The Erosion of Civilizations''(pp. 9-25); Montgomery, David. Chapter 3: "Rivers of Life" (pp. 27-47)
+
::*Focus: Zepeda offers a more general reflection on the US Food system than we've had so far. Note the difference between energy-dense and nutrient dense.
  
::*Focus:  The Montgomery chapters tell the story of food and soil.  Chapter 2 combines a bit of history and science about where soil comes from and how long we've known that.  Chapter 3 really gets us started on understanding the transition to agriculture.  Try to track competing theories, note the relationship to religion, and key points in the Egyptian, Mesopatamian and Chinese experiences with early agriculture.
 
  
==FEB 21==
+
==OCT 23: 11 ==
  
:*Reading: Montgomery, David. Chapter 4: "Graveyards of Civilizations" (pp. 49-81)
+
:*Pollan, Michael. Part 3: Getting Over Nutritionism: In Defense of Food: An Eater's Manifesto (pp. 139-201);
::*Focus: This chapter expands the soil erosion story by showing how the pattern played out in Meso-America (Tikal  Guatamala), Greece, Rome, before coming back to the Mideast and reconnecting with our friend Lowdermilk, who we last saw in China.  The chapter finished back in meso-america.  The focus here should be on the pattern of behavior that gets repeated throughout history, but also pay attention to the causal links that connect soil erosion to civiliation decline.  These vary in each situation.
+
:*Focus: Track Pollan's "eating algorithms"
  
==FEB 23==
+
==OCT 25: 12 ==
  
:*Reading: Montgomery, David. Chapter 8: "Dirty Business" (pp. 179-215); Montgomery, David. Chapter 10: "Life Span of Civilizations" (pp. 233-246):
+
:*'''Ethical Diets 1'''
 +
:*(recommended)Singer, Peter, & Mason, Jim. Chapter 18: "What Should We Eat?" (pp. 270-285): Rodale.
 +
:*Singer, Peter, & Mason, Jim. (2006). Chapter 4: "Meat and Milk Factories," (pp. 42-69).
 +
:*Fischer, Bob, "Arguments for Consuming Animal Products" (241-266) (not for quiz)
  
::*Focus:
+
==OCT 30: 13 ==
  
==FEB 28==
+
:*Nix, Stacy. Chapter 2: "Carbohydrates" ''Williams' Basic Nutrition and Diet Therapy''  (pp. 13-30).
 +
:*Moss, Michael. Chapter 11, "No Sugar, No Fats, No Sales," (pp. 236-263).
  
:*Reading: Tannahill, Reay. Chapter 3: "Changing the Face of the Earth" ''Food in History''(pp. 19-41); Tannahill, Reay. Chapter 4: "The First Civilizations" (pp. 45-59).
+
:*Recommended to browse: Dietary Guidelines for Americans 2015-2020 8th Edition (online)
  
::*Focus: We've looked at the story of our relationship to soil, now we add in a history of our relationship to actual foods. Focus on the origins of cooking, specific "primal" foods such breads, milk, and honey.  Also follow the emergence of animal agriculture.  The last section of the article on religion is also important.  In Chapter 4, the story of bread continues, along with beer and again religion.
+
==NOV 6: 14 ==
  
==MAR 2==
+
:*Barber, Dan. The 16.9 Carrot. In H. Hughes (Ed.), ''Best Food Writing 2014'', (185-190)
 +
:*Barber, Dan. Chapter 30: "Bread" (pp. 382-409)
  
:*Reading: Soler, Jean. "The Semiotics of Food in the Bible"; Tannahill, Reay. Chapter 6: Imperial Rome (pp. 71-91).
+
==NOV 8: 15 ==
  
::*Focus:  Soler take us deeper into both the dietary regimes of the Judeo-Christian tradition, as well as some philosophical considerations that might go into choosing a diet based on "trophic level". Chapter 6 tracks the story of wheat and bread technology in the Roman Empire, along with some curiosities like ''liquamen''.
+
:*Gopnik, Adam, "Who Made the Restaurant?" from The Table Comes First, 2012, (pp. 13-57).
  
==MAR 7==
+
==NOV 13: 16 ==
  
:*Reading: Wallach, Jennifer Jensen. Chapter 1. "The Cuisine of Contact" (pp. 1-31); Wallach, Jennifer Jensen. Chapter 6: "The Pious or Patriot Stomach" (pp. 143-155).
+
:*Montgomery, David. Chapter 2: "Skin of the Earth" ''Dirt: The Erosion of Civilizations''(pp. 9-25);  
 +
:*Montgomery, David. Chapter 3: "Rivers of Life" (pp. 27-47)
  
::*Focus:  We finish our food and culture unit this week with a look at several key moments in early US food culture -- the story of Thanksgiving (the real story), the story of Graham, Post, Kellog and their food ideas.  We
+
==NOV 15: 17 ==
  
==MAR 9==
+
:*Nix, Stacy. Chapter 3: Fats ''Williams' Basic Nutrition and Diet Therapy'' (pp. 31-46);
 +
:*Moss, Michael. Chapter 8, "Liquid Gold," (pp. 161-181)
  
'''Nutrition and History of Nutrition'''
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==NOV 27: 18 ==
  
:*Reading:  -- Gratzer, Walter. Chapter 1: "The Ravages of War Terrors of the Table" ''The Curious History of Nutrition'' (pp. 1-15).
+
:*Tannahill, Reay. Chapter 6: Imperial Rome (pp. 71-91)
 
+
:*Soler, Jean. "The Semiotics of Food in the Bible"
::*Focus:
+
::*Focus: Soler take us deeper into both the dietary regimes of the Judeo-Christian tradition, as well as some philosophical considerations that might go into choosing a diet based on "trophic level". Chapter 6 tracks the story of wheat and bread technology in the Roman Empire, along with some curiosities like ''liquamen''.
 
 
==MAR 14==
 
 
 
:*Spring Break
 
 
 
:*Reading: Nix, Stacy. Chapter 2: "Carbohydrates" ''Williams' Basic Nutrition and Diet Therapy''  (pp. 47-63).
 
Gratzer, Walter. Chapter 2: "The Scurvy Wars" (pp. 16-35).
 
 
 
::*Focus:
 
 
 
==MAR 16==
 
 
 
:*Spring Break
 
:*Reading: Moss, Michael. Chapter 2, "How do you get People to Crave?," Salt Sugar Fat. (pp. 24-44)
 
 
 
::*Focus:
 
 
 
==MAR 23==
 
 
 
:*Reading: Moss, Michael. Chapter 8, "Liquid Gold," (pp. 161-181)
 
 
 
::*Focus:
 
 
 
==MAR 28==
 
 
 
:*Reading: Nix, Stacy. Chapter 3: Fats ''Williams' Basic Nutrition and Diet Therapy'' (pp. 31-46); Moss, Michael. Chapter 11, "No Sugar, No Fats, No Sales," (pp. 236-263)
 
 
 
::*Focus:
 
 
 
==MAR 30==
 
 
 
:*Reading: Nix, Stacy. Chapter 4: "Proteins" Williams' Basic Nutrition and Diet Therapy (pp. 47-63).
 
Moss, Michael. Chapter 4, "Is it Cereal or Candy?" (pp. 68-94).
 
 
 
::*Focus:
 
 
 
==APR 4==
 
 
 
:*Reading: Nix, Stacy. Chapter 7: "Vitamins" ''Williams' Basic Nutrition and Diet Therapy'' (pp. 94-127): Elsevier.
 
Gratzer, Walter. Chapter 8: "Paradigm Postponed: the Tardy Arrival of Vitamins" (pp. 135-161). Oxford: Oxford UP.
 
 
 
::*Focus:
 
 
 
==APR 6==
 
 
 
:*Reading:  Break  (We'll leave this class blank for now to give us some flexibility.)
 
 
 
::*Focus:
 
 
 
==APR 11==
 
 
 
:*Reading: Barber, Dan. The 16.9 Carrot. In H. Hughes (Ed.), ''Best Food Writing 2014'', (185-190); Barber, Dan. Introduction and Chapter 12 ''The Third Plate: Field Notes on the Future of Food,'' (1-21, 159-173).
 
 
 
::*Focus:
 
 
 
==APR 13==
 
 
 
:*Reading: Barber, Dan. Chapter 30: "Bread" (pp. 382-409)
 
 
 
 
 
::*Focus:
 
  
==APR 20==
+
==NOV 29: 19 ==
  
:*Reading: Andrews, Geoff. Chapter 2: "The Critique of 'Fast Life'" ''The Slow Food Story'' (pp. 29-47).
+
:*'''Ethical Diets 2'''
 +
:*McPherson, Tristram. The Ethical Basis for Veganism
 +
:*Alfino, "Report of the Mission to Colony B"
  
::*Focus:
+
==DEC 4: 20 ==
  
==APR 25==
+
:*Montgomery, David. Chapter 4: "Graveyards of Civilizations" (pp. 49-81)
 +
:* Montgomery, David. Chapter 10: "Life Span of Civilizations" (pp. 233-246)
  
'''Food Ethics'''
+
::*Focus: This chapter expands the soil erosion story by showing how the pattern played out in Meso-America (Tikal  Guatamala), Greece, Rome, before coming back to the Mideast and reconnecting with our friend Lowdermilk, who we last saw in China.  The chapter finished back in meso-america.  The focus here should be on the pattern of behavior that gets repeated throughout history, but also pay attention to the causal links that connect soil erosion to civilization decline.  These vary in each situation.
  
:*Reading: Estabrook, Barry. "Hogonomics." (142-149). Francione, Gary L. (2012). "Animal Welfare, Happy Meat, and Veganism as the Moral Baseline." In D. M. Kaplan (Ed.), ''The Philosophy of Food'' (pp. 169-189).
+
==DEC 6: 21 ==
  
::*Focus:
+
:*Barber, Dan. Chapter 12: "Land" (pp. 158-173)
 +
:*Estabrook, Barry.  "Hogonomics" (142-149)
  
==APR 27==
+
==DEC 11: 22 ==
  
:*Reading: Haynes, Richard P. (2012). "The Myth of Happy Meat." (pp. 161-168); Singer, Peter, & Mason, Jim. (2006). Chapter 17: "The Ethics of Eating Meat" (pp. 241-270).
+
:*Nix, Stacy. Chapter 4: "Proteins" Williams' Basic Nutrition and Diet Therapy (pp. 47-63).
  
::*Focus:
+
:*'''Ethical Diets 3'''
 +
:*Fairlie, ''Meat: A Benign Extravagance'', Chapters 1-2 pp. 1-11.
  
==MAY 2==
 
  
:*Reading: Singer, Peter, & Mason, Jim. (2006). Chapter 2: "The Hidden Costs of Cheap Chicken," (pp. 21-37)
+
==DEC 13: 23 ==
  
::*Focus:
+
:*'''Ethical Diets 3'''
 +
:*Fairlie, ''Meat: A Benign Extravagance'', Chapters 3-4 pp. 12-43.
 +
:*Chamowitz, pick either Chapter 1, "What a Plant Sees" or Chapter 5, "How a Plant Knows Where It Is" -- come with notes on your chapter.
  
==MAY 4==
 
  
:*Reading: Singer, Peter, & Mason, Jim. (2006). Chapter 4: "Meat and Milk Factories," (pp. 42-69).
+
==Extra Readings==
Singer, Peter, & Mason, Jim. (2006). Chapter 9: "Seafood," (pp. 111-135).
 
  
::*Focus:
+
:*Donaldson and Kymlicka, ''Zoopolis,'' Introduction, p. 1-16.
 +
:*Donaldson and Kymlicka, ''Zoopolis,'' Chapter 2, "Universal Basic Rights for Animals," p. 19-49.
 +
:*Nix, Stacy. Chapter 7: "Vitamins" ''Williams' Basic Nutrition and Diet Therapy'' (pp. 94-127).
 +
:*Montgomery, David. Chapter 8: "Dirty Business" (pp. 179-215);

Latest revision as of 10:47, 19 November 2018

SEP 18: 1

  • First Day of Class: See in class notes for details.

SEP 20: 2

  • Focus: These mainstream and well-regarded documentaries will quickly put a critique of the US Food System on the table. Check movie availability. Take some notes on: 1. Facts that you are surprised by, think important, or are suspicious of.; 2. Questions raised by the movie; 3. Claims or thesis that the movie's documentary evidence seems to support. Note segments or narratives. Try to note some names.

SEP 25: 3

  • Gastropod episode, "The End of the Calorie"
  • Andrews, Geoff. Chapter 2: "The Critique of 'Fast Life'" The Slow Food Story (pp. 29-47).
  • Focus: The Gastropod episode will give you alot of information about the way the "calorie" came about as a unit of measurement and the complexity of measuring food energy. Andrews give you an introduction to the Slow Food Movement, which is still very prominent in Italy.

SEP 27: 4

  • Sonnenbergs, C 1, "What is the Microbiota and Why Should I Care?"
  • Recommended: View one of these gut movies:

OCT 2: 5

  • Sonnenbergs, C 5, "Trillions of Mouths to Feed"
  • Recommended: Sonnenbergs, C 7, "Eat Sh*t and Live"
  • Montanari, Massimo. Food is Culture, (1-26).
  • Focus: Montanari takes us quickly into the intersection of history, anthropology, and philosophy of food by situating food as primordial culture.


OCT 4: 6

  • Pollan, Michael. Part 1: "In the Age of Nutritionism," In Defense of Food: An Eater's Manifesto (pp. 19-40).
  • Recommended: Diamond, "Agriculture's Mixed Blessings"
  • Montanari, "Fire, Cooking, Cuisine, Civilization" (29-33) from Food is Culture.
  • Focus: Pollan gives us a quick introduction to "nutritionism" -- the idea that food just is nutrition, along with some analysis of the problems of nutrition science and nutrition policy. We'll read the rest of his analysis and recommendations in the first unit of the course.

OCT 9: 7

  • Barber, Dan. Introduction The Third Plate: Field Notes on the Future of Food, (1-22).
  • Nestle, "Introduction: The Food Industry and 'Eat More,' from Food Politics", 2013. (1-30).

OCT 11: 8

  • Pollan, Michael. Part 2: The Western Diet (pp. 83-136)

OCT 16: 9

  • Nestle, Marion. Chapter 1: From "Eat More" to "Eat Less" 1900-1990 (pp. 31-50).
  • Nestle, Marion. Chapter 2, Politics Versus Science -- opposing the food pyramind, 1991-1992 (pp. 51-66).


OCT 18: 10

  • Moss, Michael. Chapter 4, "Is it Cereal or Candy," Salt Sugar Fat. (pp. 68-93)
  • Zepeda, Lydia. Carving Values with a Spoon. Food and Philosophy (pp. 31-43).
  • Focus: Zepeda offers a more general reflection on the US Food system than we've had so far. Note the difference between energy-dense and nutrient dense.


OCT 23: 11

  • Pollan, Michael. Part 3: Getting Over Nutritionism: In Defense of Food: An Eater's Manifesto (pp. 139-201);
  • Focus: Track Pollan's "eating algorithms"

OCT 25: 12

  • Ethical Diets 1
  • (recommended)Singer, Peter, & Mason, Jim. Chapter 18: "What Should We Eat?" (pp. 270-285): Rodale.
  • Singer, Peter, & Mason, Jim. (2006). Chapter 4: "Meat and Milk Factories," (pp. 42-69).
  • Fischer, Bob, "Arguments for Consuming Animal Products" (241-266) (not for quiz)

OCT 30: 13

  • Nix, Stacy. Chapter 2: "Carbohydrates" Williams' Basic Nutrition and Diet Therapy (pp. 13-30).
  • Moss, Michael. Chapter 11, "No Sugar, No Fats, No Sales," (pp. 236-263).
  • Recommended to browse: Dietary Guidelines for Americans 2015-2020 8th Edition (online)

NOV 6: 14

  • Barber, Dan. The 16.9 Carrot. In H. Hughes (Ed.), Best Food Writing 2014, (185-190)
  • Barber, Dan. Chapter 30: "Bread" (pp. 382-409)

NOV 8: 15

  • Gopnik, Adam, "Who Made the Restaurant?" from The Table Comes First, 2012, (pp. 13-57).

NOV 13: 16

  • Montgomery, David. Chapter 2: "Skin of the Earth" Dirt: The Erosion of Civilizations(pp. 9-25);
  • Montgomery, David. Chapter 3: "Rivers of Life" (pp. 27-47)

NOV 15: 17

  • Nix, Stacy. Chapter 3: Fats Williams' Basic Nutrition and Diet Therapy (pp. 31-46);
  • Moss, Michael. Chapter 8, "Liquid Gold," (pp. 161-181)

NOV 27: 18

  • Tannahill, Reay. Chapter 6: Imperial Rome (pp. 71-91)
  • Soler, Jean. "The Semiotics of Food in the Bible"
  • Focus: Soler take us deeper into both the dietary regimes of the Judeo-Christian tradition, as well as some philosophical considerations that might go into choosing a diet based on "trophic level". Chapter 6 tracks the story of wheat and bread technology in the Roman Empire, along with some curiosities like liquamen.

NOV 29: 19

  • Ethical Diets 2
  • McPherson, Tristram. The Ethical Basis for Veganism
  • Alfino, "Report of the Mission to Colony B"

DEC 4: 20

  • Montgomery, David. Chapter 4: "Graveyards of Civilizations" (pp. 49-81)
  • Montgomery, David. Chapter 10: "Life Span of Civilizations" (pp. 233-246)
  • Focus: This chapter expands the soil erosion story by showing how the pattern played out in Meso-America (Tikal Guatamala), Greece, Rome, before coming back to the Mideast and reconnecting with our friend Lowdermilk, who we last saw in China. The chapter finished back in meso-america. The focus here should be on the pattern of behavior that gets repeated throughout history, but also pay attention to the causal links that connect soil erosion to civilization decline. These vary in each situation.

DEC 6: 21

  • Barber, Dan. Chapter 12: "Land" (pp. 158-173)
  • Estabrook, Barry. "Hogonomics" (142-149)

DEC 11: 22

  • Nix, Stacy. Chapter 4: "Proteins" Williams' Basic Nutrition and Diet Therapy (pp. 47-63).
  • Ethical Diets 3
  • Fairlie, Meat: A Benign Extravagance, Chapters 1-2 pp. 1-11.


DEC 13: 23

  • Ethical Diets 3
  • Fairlie, Meat: A Benign Extravagance, Chapters 3-4 pp. 12-43.
  • Chamowitz, pick either Chapter 1, "What a Plant Sees" or Chapter 5, "How a Plant Knows Where It Is" -- come with notes on your chapter.


Extra Readings

  • Donaldson and Kymlicka, Zoopolis, Introduction, p. 1-16.
  • Donaldson and Kymlicka, Zoopolis, Chapter 2, "Universal Basic Rights for Animals," p. 19-49.
  • Nix, Stacy. Chapter 7: "Vitamins" Williams' Basic Nutrition and Diet Therapy (pp. 94-127).
  • Montgomery, David. Chapter 8: "Dirty Business" (pp. 179-215);