
Americans have never been more concerned about their food's purity. The organic trade association claims that three-quarters of all consumers buy organic foods each year, spending billions of dollars "Dairy farm families, health officials, and food manufacturers have simultaneously stoked human desires for an all-natural product and intervened to ensure milk's safety and profitability," writes Kendra Smith-Howard. In Pure and Modern Milk, she tells the history of a nearly universal consumer product, and sheds light on America's food industry. Today, she notes, milk reaches supermarkets in an entirely different state than it had at its creation. Cows march into milking parlors, where tubes are attached to their teats, and the product of their lactation is mechanically pumped into tanks. Enormous, expensive machines pasteurize it, fortify it with vitamins, remove fat, and store it at government-regulated temperatures. It reaches consumers in a host of forms: as fluid milk, butter, ice cream, and in apparently non-dairy foods such as whey solids or milk proteins. Smith-Howard examines the cultural, political, and social context, discussing the attempts to reform the production and distribution of this once-perilous product in the Progressive Era, the history of butter between the world wars, dairy waste at mid-century, and the postwar landscape of mass production. She asks how milk could be conceptualized as a "natural" product, even as it has been incorporated into Cheez Whiz and wood glue. And she shows how consumer's changing expectations have had repercussions back down the chain, affecting farmers, cows, and rural landscapes. A groundbreaking, interdisciplinary history, this book reveals the complexity and challenges of humanity's dependence on other species.
This book investigates the historical paradox of how milk has been simultaneously marketed as a pure, natural product while undergoing intense industrial processing and technological intervention since 1900. Kendra Smith-Howard, a historian specializing in environmental and agricultural studies, utilizes a wide array of archival records and industry data to trace the evolution of the American dairy industry. She argues that the modern consumer's desire for purity has paradoxically driven the very industrialization and chemical modification that distances milk from its biological origins. By examining the supply chain from the farm to the supermarket, the author provides a framework for understanding how human expectations shape the physical landscape and the treatment of livestock.
What You Will Find
Scholars and historians in the field of food studies identify this work as a rigorous examination of the intersection between industrial agriculture and environmental policy. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which provides a comprehensive look at the complexities of the modern food supply chain.
Page Count:
240
Publication Date:
2013-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
019930730X
ISBN-13:
9780199307302
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