TY - BOOK ID - 101220159 TI - Meat planet PY - 2019 SN - 0520968263 9780520295537 0520295536 9780520968264 PB - Oakland, California DB - UniCat KW - Artificial foods. KW - Engineered foods KW - Fabricated foods KW - Food, Artificial KW - Substitutes for food KW - Synthetic foods KW - Food KW - Food substitutes KW - animals. KW - capitalism. KW - cultured meat. KW - fake meat. KW - farmland. KW - food system. KW - fragile ecosystem. KW - future of food. KW - generating meat in the lab. KW - growing appetite for meat. KW - hamburger. KW - justice. KW - lab created meat. KW - lab grown. KW - manufactured meat. KW - meat. KW - production. KW - social and political. KW - sustainable protein. KW - sustaining life. KW - vegan. KW - vegetarian. KW - Meat substitutes KW - Artificial foods KW - Meat industry and trade - Moral and ethical aspects KW - Meat substitutes. KW - Meat industry and trade KW - Meat consumption KW - Packing industry KW - Food industry and trade KW - Meat alternates KW - Substitutes for meat KW - Moral and ethical aspects. UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:101220159 AB - "In 2013, a Dutch scientist unveiled the world’s first laboratory-created hamburger. Since then, the idea of producing meat, not from live animals but from carefully cultured tissues, has spread like wildfire through the media. Meanwhile, cultured meat researchers race against population growth and climate change in an effort to make sustainable protein. Meat Planet explores the quest to generate meat in the lab—a substance sometimes called “cultured meat”—and asks what it means to imagine that this is the future of food. Neither an advocate nor a critic of cultured meat, Benjamin Aldes Wurgaft spent five years researching the phenomenon. In Meat Planet, he reveals how debates about lab-grown meat reach beyond debates about food, examining the links between appetite, growth, and capitalism. Could satiating the growing appetite for meat actually lead to our undoing? Are we simply using one technology to undo the damage caused by another? Like all problems in our food system, the meat problem is not merely a problem of production. It is intrinsically social and political, and it demands that we examine questions of justice and desirable modes of living in a shared and finite world. Benjamin Wurgaft tells a story that could utterly transform the way we think of animals, the way we relate to farmland, the way we use water, and the way we think about population and our fragile ecosystem’s capacity to sustain life. He argues that even if cultured meat does not “succeed,” it functions—much like science fiction—as a crucial mirror that we can hold up to our contemporary fleshy dysfunctions." -- Publisher's description. ER -