Jonathan Safran Foer’s “Let Them Eat Dog”

Jonathan Safran Foer’s “Let Them Eat Dog”

Modest Proposal Paper: In the style of Jonathan Safran Foer’s “Let Them Eat Dog” write a satrical argument essay for a change to be made in American Culture.

In the style of Jonathan Safran Foer’s “Let Them Eat Dog”

Modest Proposal Paper

Instructions:

1. In the style of Jonathan Safran Foer’s “Let Them Eat Dog” write a satrical argument essay for a change to be made in American Culture.

Your Paper should demonstrate:
Firstly, argumentation ability.

Secondly, command of style that shows you are attempting to present your argument in a beautiful manner

Thirdly, knowledge of the subject you select

Finally, this essay should be in 10th-11th grade high-school level

More details;

Should We Eat Meat?

As health experts increasingly worry about heart disease and obesity, this is an especially good time for Americans to evaluate the merits of meat-eating. This issue goes well beyond health and nutrition, however. According to the Vegetarian Resource Group, the over 8 million vegetarians and vegans who live in the United States become vegetarians for a variety of reasons—nutritional, ethical, environmental, and religious. In other words, their choice to forego meat is not only personal but also cultural. As Jonathan Safran Foer writes in “Let Them Eat Dog,” “Food is not rational. Food is culture, habit, craving, and identity.”

As shown by the increasing popularity of organic and locally grown food as well as by the popularity of books such as Jonathan Safran Foer’s Eating Animals (2009) and documentaries such as Food, Inc. (2008) and Fed Up (2014), our culture seems obsessed with healthy eating. Of course, dietary controversies are not new—and neither is vegetarianism, which has long been associate with certain religious traditions (Jainism and various sects of Hinduism, for example).

Western philosophers from Pythagoras to Jean-Jacques Rousseau and René Descartes also advocated forms of vegetarianism. In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, a vegetarian diet was associate with radical politics. The English Romantic poet Percy Bysshe Shelley endorsed the practice of vegetarianism—and even blamed some of the excesses of the French Revolution on meat-eating. In the United States, vegetarianism has had strong advocates dating back to the founding of our country.

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