Haven鈥檛 we had enough already? No, I鈥檓 not talking cheeseburgers. I鈥檓 talking about the steady diet of books and movies about America鈥檚 fast food folly that have appeared over the past two decades. Best-selling books such as Michael Pollan鈥檚 The Omnivore鈥檚 Dilemma and Eric Schlosser鈥檚 Fast Food Nation have helped to inspire a plethora of popular food films, from Supersize Me! to Food, Inc. It seems that we can鈥檛 get enough. We鈥檙e inundated with this stuff. Is there really more to say about the links between obesity and franchise food production? In her new book, American history scholar Chin Jou makes a convincing case that we鈥檙e just now getting to the meat of the matter.
Supersizing Urban America聽offers a fresh look at the history of fast food franchising in the US. Jou digests the Pollans and Schlossers of the world and then offers readers a second helping of scholarly research, providing a fine-grained analysis of why fast food chains came to colonise not only America鈥檚 suburbs but its downtown corridors as well. For example, Schlosser devotes just a few pages (literally two references in the index of Fast Food Nation) to the ways in which the Small Business Administration (SBA) helped McDonald鈥檚 and other firms grow. In contrast, Jou offers lengthy and detailed statistical distillations that show how this federal agency (and other government programmes, such as Bill Clinton鈥檚 Empowerment Zones/Enterprise Communities initiative) helped to promote fast food growth in minority communities in inner-city America (often in calculated efforts to quell urban unrest). Her findings are sometimes astounding. Take, for instance, this disturbing gem: in 2009, Subway was the 鈥渟ingle largest beneficiary of SBA loan guarantees鈥 designed to help small businesses compete in an economy dominated by large corporations.
But if my analysis above (and the title of the book, for that matter) suggests that Jou solely blames the government for Americans鈥 obesity woes, that would be an inaccurate reduction of her study. Jou鈥檚 narrative is much more nuanced. Many different groups, including the minority communities most endangered by fast food franchise expansion, bear some responsibility for the McDonaldisation of the nation. For years, the National Black McDonald鈥檚 Operators Association and the black human rights group Operation PUSH worked proactively to build golden arches in the country鈥檚 crumbling urban centres. In this sense, the lines between victims, villains and valiant heroes are blurred.
This is what makes the book鈥檚 10-page concluding chapter, 鈥淧roposing solutions鈥, a bit frustrating. After rightly pointing out the incredible complexity of America鈥檚 fast food problem, the final chapter reads like a grab bag of half-explored strategies for deconstructing the nation鈥檚 unhealthy food system. Government initiatives such as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program are thrown in with just a paragraph of analysis in a breathless finale that leaves the reader wanting more.
糖心Vlog
Nevertheless, Supersizing Urban America should be required reading for anyone seeking to understand the links between government policy, fast food franchising and the economic and biological health of urban communities. It鈥檚 a book that should make us rethink not only the way we eat but the foundations of American capitalism.
Bart Elmore is assistant professor of environmental history at Ohio State University and author of Citizen Coke: The Making of Coca-Cola Capitalism (2015).
糖心Vlog
Supersizing Urban America: How Inner Cities Got Fast Food with Government Help
By Chin Jou
University of Chicago Press,聽248pp, 拢19.00
ISBN 9780226921921 and 1945 (e-book)
Published 3 May 2017
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline:聽How downtown got fat and fried
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