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What is Myth of Naturalness

Handbook of Research on Social Marketing and Its Influence on Animal Origin Food Product Consumption
Justifies meat consumption because it has always been this way, religion says so, or because humans are meant to eat meat.
Published in Chapter:
Marketing Meat Alternatives: Meat Myths and Their Replication in Advertising for Plant-Based Meat
Malte B. Rödl (The University of Manchester, UK)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-5225-4757-0.ch022
Abstract
Meat alternatives have been proposed as one solution to decrease meat consumption and thus its negative effects on individuals and the environment. Using three meat myths identified in literature on meat consumption—meat eating is normal, natural, and necessary—this chapter discusses how they emerge in six selected print adverts: (1) normal: dishes containing meat alternatives are portrayed as traditional, perpetuating normality; (2) natural: the myth that it is natural to eat meat is not explicitly opposed, but bypassed; (3) necessary: meat alternatives are portrayed as even more necessary for good health than meat. The author proposes changes to neutralise these meat myths; but they are unlikely to be adopted by advertising due to its commercial goals. Although meat alternatives are theoretically preferable over meat (and can help individual transitions to vegetarianism), their marketing perpetuates meat myths, and may therefore reinforce a meat-centred culture.
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