aTypical Joe: a gay New Yorker living in the rural South

 

Tuesday, December 12, 2006

Consider the lobster

Today was my first exposure to David Foster Wallace’s Consider the Lobster, his August 2004 feature on the Maine Lobster Festival for Gourmet magazine. LobsterLib.jpgNow, I hate to admit it but I am one of those who always believed the myth that Lobsters feel no pain. Turns out, duh, being boiled hurts:

Cooking live lobsters does not result in a quick and painless death. “According to marine zoologists,” Wallace writes, “it usually takes lobsters between 35 and 45 seconds to die in boiling water.”

He also notes, “However stuporous the lobster is from the trip home, for instance, it tends to come alarmingly to life when placed in boiling water. If you’re tilting it from a container into the steaming kettle, the lobster will sometimes try to cling to the container’s sides or even to hook its claws over the kettle’s rim like a person trying to keep from going over the edge of a roof.”

Lobsters suffer from the minute they are trapped until the last agonizing seconds of their lives. Like other animals used for food, lobsters are torn from their natural habitat and transported long distances. “They come up alive in the traps,” Wallace writes, “are placed in containers of seawater, and can, so long as the water’s aerated and the animals’ claws are pegged or banded to keep them from tearing one another up under the stresses of captivity, survive right up until they’re boiled.”

Wallace confesses that he has “not succeeded in working out any sort of personal ethical system” in which eating lobsters is morally defensible. “[A]fter all the abstract intellection, there remain the facts of the frantically clanking lid, the pathetic clinging to the edge of the pot. Standing at the stove, it is hard to deny in any meaningful way that this is a living creature experiencing pain and wishing to avoid/escape the painful experience.”

His piece is a great read. READ IT

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  1. Uh, its a lobster. They are glorified cockroaches. Their systems are hardly more complex and they perform the same duties--scavenging.

    Allow me to pose a question, rats are very complex organisms. Do we need to treat rats humanely when killing them?

     on  12/12  at  03:28 PM
  2. Actually, I once had a rat caught in my ground floor Prospect Heights Brooklyn apartment. I called an exterminator to come in and get rid of it for me. It turned out that the guy used my crowbar to club the thing to death, and I watched and listened to the thuds and squeals.

    Yes, I’d prefer a humane way of killing rats. But rats (like cockroaches) are something of a threat, lobsters are not. And I don’t have a ritual killing of the rat before I cook and eat him.

    You obviously didn’t take my suggestion and read the article. It is entertaining and thought-provoking. He wouldn’t necessarily disagree with your description of the lobster. From his piece:

    “Lobsters are basically giant sea-insects. Like most arthropods, they date from the Jurassic period, biologically so much older than mammalia that they may as well be from another planet… And it’s true that they are garbagemen of the sea, eaters of dead stuff, although they’ll also eat some live shellfish, certain kinds of injured fish, and sometimes each other.”

    He did do research and did conclude that if the question is simply, “does the lobster feel pain?” there’s a darned good argument that it does. As to his conclusions, and mine, about what our moral obligation to the lobster is, it’s not so clear as the PETA link I quoted implies.

    joe  on  12/12  at  09:41 PM
  3. Ive read parts of his book (very funny indeed) and I know he’s sympathetic more or less to my thoughts. Its just I enjoy lobster and hate the treat them humanely belief.

     on  12/13  at  09:37 AM
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