Diet books contribute to a $60-billion industry as they speak to the 45
million Americans who diet every year. Yet these books don't just tell
readers what to eat: they offer complete philosophies about who
Americans are and how we should live. Diet and the Disease of
Civilization interrupts the predictable debate about eating right to
ask a hard question: what if it's not calories--but concepts--that
should be counted?
Cultural critic Adrienne Rose Bitar reveals how four popular diets
retell the "Fall of Man" as the narrative backbone for our national
consciousness. Intensifying the moral panic of the obesity epidemic,
they depict civilization itself as a disease and offer diet as the one
true cure.
Bitar reads each diet--the Paleo Diet, the Garden of Eden Diet, the
Pacific Island Diet, the detoxification or detox diet--as both myth and
manual, a story with side effects shaping social movements, driving
industry, and constructing fundamental ideas about sickness and health.
Diet and the Disease of Civilization unearths the ways in which diet
books are actually utopian manifestos not just for better bodies, but
also for a healthier society and a more perfect world.