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"Drink Milk for Fitness": The Cultural Politics of Human Biological Variation and Milk
Consumption in the United StatesAuthor(s): Andrea S. WileySource: American Anthropologist , Vol. 106, No. 3 (Sep., 2004), pp. 506-517
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ANDREA S. WILEY
"Drink Milk for Fitness": The Cultural Politics
of Human Biological Variation and Milk
Consumption in the United States
ABSTRACT Cow's milk is accorded a high cultural value in the contemporary United States. Its white color, association with the maternal
and the pastoral, and repeated mention in the Bible add positive symbolic weight to this major national agricultural commodity. Thus, it
comes as no surprise that influential policy-making institutions in the United States recommend milk consumption for all U.S. groups. This
is despite variation in adult populations' abilities to digest milk, which has been documented by biological anthropologists. This article
assesses various U.S. "stories" about milk consumption and its relationship to biological variation against the biological anthropological
explanation of variation in lactase activity/lactose tolerance. Many of these serve as normalizing discourses that ultimately pathologize
biological difference and may undermine the dietary traditions of some ethnic groups. In particular, the close relationship between
government and the dairy industry leads to policies that fail to seriously consider variation in digestive physiology among the diverse U.S.
populations. [Keywords: milk, lactase, nutrition policy, biological variation]
T H A T P O P U L A T I O N S V A R Y w i t h r e s p e c t t o t h e i r c a
pacity to digest milk in adulthood is well known
among biological anthropologists and organizations in the
United States involved in the formulation and enactment
of food and nutrition policies. This variation in response
to milk derives from genetic regulation of lactase, the en-
zyme that breaks down the milk sugar lactose. In most pop-
ulations, lactase activity declines during childhood; in rel-
atively few does lactase activity remain high throughout
adulthood. Cross-culturally, persistence of lactase activity
into adulthood correlates with (1) fresh milk consumption;
(2) a central role for milk production in the domestic econ-
omy; (3) positive evaluation of milk and other dairy prod-
ucts; and (4) physiological capacity to digest and, hence, tol-
erate lactose. This article is primarily concerned with how
the anthropological interpretation of lactase persistence
compares to those offered by institutions in the United
States that have an impact on dietary recommendations for
consumption of cow's milk, an important agricultural com-
modity. Because polices often reflect the biases and agendas
of their authors, the portrayal of lactase persistence by the
dominant ethnic group-U.S. citizens derived from north-
ern Europe, who are largely lactase persistent-is likely to
indicate ethno- or biocentric bias, insofar as it promotes
milk consumption and downplays the significance of other
biologies.
First, I outline the state of knowledge about the bi-
ology of lactase persistence, especially its genetic founda-
tions, and what is known about population variation in
these genotypes. The anthropological discussion builds on
this genetic information and seeks to understand the evo-
lutionary causes of population variation. Next, describe the
stories told by various U.S. institutions-the United States
Department of Agriculture (USDA) and the dairy indus-
try, professional medical associations, nutritionists and di-
eticians, and antimilk coalitions. Despite widespread ac-
knowledgement that a substantial minority of people in
the United States-and the majority in the world-are lac-
tase impersistent as adults, it appears that the strong cul-
tural value placed on cow's milk and governmental sup-
port of the dairy industry inhibit policies that put the
anthropological understanding of lactase persistence into
practice. Thus, while the latter emphasizes biological vari-
ation in milk digestive physiology and the unique histor-
ical processes that produced it, this perspective has been
subsumed into subtly disguised normalizing discourses
that downplay the significance of this diversity and pro-
mote a modal biological response to milk that should
American Anthropologist, Vol. 106, Issue 3, pp. 506-517, ISSN 0002-7294, online ISSN 1548-1433. C 2004 by the American Anthropological Association.
All rights reserved. Send requests for permission to reprint to: Rights and Permissions, University of California Press, Journals Division, 2000 Center Street,
Suite 303, Berkeley, CA 94704-1223.
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Wiley * Biological Diversity and Milk Consumption in the United States 507
facilitate its consumption by all U.S. citizens throughout
life.
Given the interconnections between discourses of bi-
ological variation, dietary recommendations, and political
economic forces supporting the U.S. dairy industry, a bio-
cultural perspective is particularly relevant to this analysis.
In using the biocultural label, I consider not only how cul-
tural factors influenced biological evolution (as is surely the
case in the evolution of lactase persistence) but also how un-
derstandings of human biological variation are constructed
and elaborated within a cultural context.
THE BIOLOGICAL FOUNDATION OF LACTASE
PERSISTENCE
Lactase (more technically, lactase-phlorizin hydrolase
[LPH]) is an enzyme found in the brush border of the je-
junum of the mammalian small intestine. It functions to
break down lactose, a sugar found only in mammalian
milks, into its component sugars, glucose and galactose.
Because lactose cannot be absorbed directly, lactase is nec-
essary for the digestion and metabolic utilization of milk
sugar. In most mammalian species, lactase production is
high at birth and begins to decline around the time of
weaning. As a result, adult mammals produce only resid-
ual quantities of lactase. Up through the latter part of the
20th century, researchers debated whether lactase activity
could be maintained or induced by a diet containing lac-
tose. Although a few studies suggested that it could be, most
concluded that the decline of lactase production occurred
independently of lactose in the diet (Sahi 1994b). Human
studies from the 1960s indicated that contrary to earlier be-
liefs, most humans followed the basic mammalian pattern
(Bayless and Rosensweig 1966, 1967), and that lactase ac-
tivity in adults could not be increased by providing lactose.
It is now well understood that the age-related decline in
lactase production is regulated genetically, and that there is
both individual and population variation in this trait. While
frequencies of adult lactase activity are somewhat continu-
ously distributed across populations, two patterns are eas-
ily distinguished: (1) populations in which high frequen-
cies of adults continue to produce high levels of lactase in
adulthood and (2) populations in which lactase production
declines to low levels by adulthood (Sahi 1994a). Several
thorough reviews describe population frequencies of lac-
tase persistence (cf. Durham 1991; Flatz 1987; Sahi 1994a;
Scrimshaw and Murray 1988; Simoons 1978). While stud-
ies of individual populations vary tremendously in their
methodology and sample populations, it is clear that high
rates of lactase persistence are found only among northern
Europeans; South Asians; herding populations of the Mid-
dle East, Arabian Peninsula, and sub-Saharan Africa; and
descendents of these populations.
Populations also vary in the age at which lactase activity
declines, from one to two years to 20 years. Those groups
with high rates of persistence exhibit later average ages of
onset among members who are impersistent (Sahi 1994a).
Neither the mechanism underlying this age variation nor
its significance is well understood.
TERMINOLOGY
A number of terms are employed to describe the biologi-
cal phenomenon of lactase activity in adults, and their us-
age provides insights into how various authors or institu-
tions view variation in this phenotype. The terms lactose
tolerance/intolerance are most common in vernacular usage.
These refer to the subjective experience of gastrointestinal
symptoms after lactose consumption (bloating, diarrhea,
cramps), which vary considerably across individuals. It is
quite possible to have high lactase activity but report in-
tolerance or, more frequently, to have biologically assayed
low lactase activity but report no symptoms of intolerance.
Other terms are thus preferred, although there is no consen-
sus on which are best. In recognition that low levels of lac-
tase activity are modal for the human species, many authors
prefer lactase persistence/nonpersistence, lactase restriction, or
high/low lactose digestion capacity.
The term adult-type hypolactasia has gained currency as
a way to describe low levels of lactase activity among adults,
although Timo Sahi (1994b), a leading proponent of this
terminology, dismisses the possibility of using hyperlacta-
sia as its counterpart. However, given that hypolactasia is
the norm for the species, individuals with higher lactase ac-
tivity in adulthood could properly be described as having
hyperlactasia. Lactase deficiency implies pathology, as do the
descriptors lactose maldigestion and malabsorption. Further-
more, terminology that includes the word lactose implies
that lactose is part of the diet; lactose maldigestion or mal-
absporption would never manifest if lactose was not being
consumed.' Changes in lactase activity or the digestion of
lactose among adults can also stem from nutritional factors
(e.g., protein malnutrition), pathologies of the small intes-
tine, and gastrointestinal infections. When any of these re-
sult in low levels of lactose digestion, secondary hypolactasia,
malabsorption, or maldigestion is the diagnostic label. Adult-
type hypolactasia that derives exclusively from age-related
declines in lactase activity is considered primary.
Throughout this article I will use the terms lactase per-
sistence/impersistence. These are preferred because they are
relatively value free, implying neither pathology nor hav-
ing too much or too little or high or low lactase activity.
THE ANTHROPOLOGICAL STORY OF LACTASE
PERSISTENCE
Variation in adult lactase production appears to be under
strong genetic control, and genealogical studies have found
a pattern that is consistent with a dominant mode of ex-
pression for the alleles associated with lactase persistence
(Kretchmer 1972; Sahi 1994a). The gene for the lactase en-
zyme is found on chromosome 2 and is not variable across
populations in ways that correlate with differences in lac-
tase persistence. Regulation of the lactase gene is variable,
however, and there are four common variants of the lactase
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508 American Anthropologist * Vol. 106, No. 3 * September 2004
haplotype (A, B, C, and U). A is most common in northern
Europe, with declines in frequency across southern Europe
and India, where B and C are more common. U is notably
absent among Indo-European populations but is found in
most others. Haplotype diversity is greatest in sub-Saharan
African populations (Hollox et al. 2000). Lactase persis-
tence is most frequently associated with the A form but
is found occasionally with the other forms (Harvey et al.
1998; Hollox et al. 2000).
Recently a noncoding segment of DNA upstream from
the lactase gene has been identified as a site of variation
in adult lactase activity (Enattah et al. 2002). Individuals
with the C nucleotide at a locus in the 13th intron or a
G in the 9th intron (these two introns being eight kilo-
bases apart) within a neighboring gene about 14 kilobases
upstream from the lactase gene were lactase impersistent,
while those with T or A at these same loci were lactase
persistent. Although the exact mechanism by which these
loci regulate lactase production remains unclear, current ev-
idence points to their action at the level of gene transcrip-
tion, as most studies demonstrate variation in mRNA levels
between those who are lactase persistent or impersistent, a
pattern that becomes evident during childhood (Wang et al.
1998).
It is widely accepted that the origins of animal do-
mestication set the stage for selection favoring the abil-
ity to digest lactose in adulthood-for without exposure
to mammalian milk in adulthood, presumably no advan-
tage would derive from continued production of lactase.
Indeed, all populations with high rates of lactase persis-
tence have long histories of dairying. Given that milk is rich
in several nutrients (protein, fat, calcium, sugar), Frederick
Simoons (1978, 2001) proposed that individuals with a mu-
tation allowing them to consume the milk of domesticated
mammals throughout life would have been healthier and
better nourished than those without it. Researchers have
suggested that a three to seven percent fitness advantage
would have been sufficient to generate the high frequen-
cies of lactase persistence found in dairy-dependent popu-
lations (Flatz 1987; McCracken 1971). However, as William
Durham (1991) pointed out, there are many populations
with long histories of domesticating dairy animals that also
have low rates of lactase persistence. These groups often
make use of fermented milk products (e.g., yogurt, kefir) or
cheese. Bacterial fermentation results in dairy products that
are low in lactose, while the process of cheese making in-
volves draining off the lactose-rich whey from milk solids.
Thus, having a history of dairying is necessary but not
sufficient for explaining global variation in lactase persis-
tence, and only populations drinking substantial amounts
of fresh milk would have benefited from the ability to digest
lactose.
Noting that lactase persistence and fresh milk con-
sumption correlated with latitude, Durham (1991) pro-
posed that the low levels of UV light found at high latitudes
would have selected for lactase persistence among dairying
populations living there. This hypothesis was based on the
observation by Gebhard Flatz and Hans Rotthauwe (1973)
that the presence of lactose in the small intestine enhances
calcium absorption. Vitamin D is synthesized in skin cells
in the presence of UV light and facilitates calcium uptake,
but when exposure to UV light is reduced-and Vitamin
D synthesis is, thus, likewise diminished-lactose, which is
found only in fresh milk, can increase calcium absorption.
The calcium absorption hypothesis was recently subjected
to critical review by Simoons (2001), who concluded that
there is scant osteoarchaeological, historical, or biomedi-
cal evidence to support it. Further, while this may help ex-
plain the very high frequencies of lactase persistence found
among northern Europeans, it has little relevance for un-
derstanding lactase persistence in populations at lower lat-
itudes. There, other nutritional advantages to adult milk
consumption, such as hydration or the use of lactose as a
carbohydrate, a nutrient rare in the diets of exclusive pas-
toralists, may have accrued to those able to digest fresh milk.
Another hypothesis that has received relatively little
attention is that since the genetic markers associated with
lactase persistence are known in geographically diverse ar-
eas, lactase persistence could have spread prior to the rise
of dairying cultures. B. Anderson and C. Vullo (1994) pro-
posed that lactase impersistence was selected for as a de-
fense against falciparum malaria, the most deadly form of
the parasitic disease. Milk is a very rich source of the B-
vitamin riboflavin, and malarial parasites require riboflavin
to multiply in red blood cells. In the context of riboflavin
deficiency at a level tolerated by a human host, malarial
reproduction is significantly inhibited (Dutta et al. 1985).
Thus, early reduction in lactase production would lead to
earlier termination of breastfeeding; this in turn would gen-
erate riboflavin deficiency (from decreased milk intake) suf-
ficient to reduce malarial infection without being overly
deleterious to the child. Because populations vary in the age
at which lactase activity may decline, later age of onset of
lactase impersistence would have been tolerated in popula-
tions not exposed to deadly forms of malaria (e.g., northern
Europeans, who have both high rates of lactase persistence
and later ages of onset of impersistence among those with
that genotype). However, a study in Sardinia showed that
three villages with varying exposure to malaria did have dif-
ferent frequencies of other known adaptations to malaria
(e.g., G-6PD deficiency and f-thalessemia) but did not vary
in their rates of lactase persistence (Meloni et al. 1998).
This hypothesis also fails to explain why some populations
would remain lactase persistent throughout life, given that
this is the derived (i.e., evolutionarily recent) condition for
mammals.
While selection probably played a key role in the spread
of lactase persistence among some dairying populations,
other evolutionary forces have also contributed to global
diversity in adult lactase activity. Genetic drift may have
been important in reducing diversity in genes associated
with lactase activity in non-African populations, given that
there is greater variation within contemporary African pop-
ulations (Hollox et al. 2000). Clearly, gene flow has also
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Wiley * Biological Diversity and Milk Consumption in the United States 509
played an enormous role among historical and contempo-
rary populations, especially in areas colonized by north-
ern European populations (Flatz 1987). Collectively, these
forces have generated the more-or-less continuous distribu-
tion in population frequencies of lactase persistence.
OTHER STORIES: LACTASE PERSISTENCE AND HEALTH
POLICY IN THE UNITED STATES
The anthropological story of lactase persistence is a story
of human variation: Lactase impersistence is the norm for
the species and persistence is the unusual condition. In-
dividuals in most populations experience declines in lac-
tase production during childhood and, hence, have little of
the enzyme required to fully digest milk in adulthood. As
expected, these are also populations that historically have
made little use of fresh milk. Conversely, populations with
high rates of lactase persistence have included dairy farming
as an intrinsic part of the food economy and extensive use
of dairy products in their cuisines (Durham 1991). These
practices have become entrenched in many areas perma-
nently colonized by Europeans in particular (e.g., United,
States, Canada, New Zealand, Australia). While the extent
to which fresh milk was a large part of traditional European
diets is unclear, it is now widely consumed in European-
derived populations in the United States. Milk is especially
recommended for children, teenagers, and adult women; it
is considered necessary to support the needs of fetal growth
during pregnancy and milk production during lactation,
to build and maintain a strong skeleton, and to ward off
osteoporosis at older ages. Whether these recommenda-
tions are well supported by evidence is a matter of some
contention, especially given that other populations main-
tain adequate fetal and child growth and bone density in
the absence of milk consumption (cf. Bertron et al. 1999;
Feskanich et al. 1997; Heaney 2000; Specker and Wosje
2001; Weinsier and Krumdieck 2000). While I have reviewed
this topic elsewhere (Wiley 2004), here the question is
whether the anthropological story of variation in lactase ac-
tivity has any currency in policies promoted by U.S. policy-
making institutions dealing with food, nutrition, or health,
given the hegemony of European culinary traditions and
agricultural practices. What other discourses about this as-
pect of human biological variation are constructed by such
institutions?
USDA and the National Dairy Council (NDC)
The USDA has a dual mandate within the U.S. government:
to promote U.S. agricultural interests and to issue food and
nutrition guidelines that promote the health of U.S. citi-
zens. That these two missions might be at odds with one
another was apparently not considered when the USDA
was created. At the time, undernutrition was a considerable
problem; however, in the current dietary environment of
hyperabundance of relatively cheap agricultural commodi-
ties (e.g., corn, wheat, milk) and dietary guidelines that en-
courage consumption of calorie dense foods, conflict be-
tween these goals is becoming more visible as rates of obe-
sity and its concomitant health problems continue to rise
(Nestle 2002).
Dairy products make up about 11 percent of U.S.
agricultural commodities (U.S. Department of Commerce
2002). In the Dairy Production Stabilization Act of 1983,
the U.S. government authorized the USDA to oversee na-
tional programs for "dairy product promotion, research,
and nutrition education as part of a comprehensive strategy
to increase human consumption of milk and dairy prod-
ucts" (USDA 2002:5). In 1990, the Fluid Milk Promotion
Act specifically targeted fluid (fresh) milk. In justifying this
act, Congress stated that
(1) fluid milk products are basic foods and a primary
source of required nutrients such as calcium, and oth-
erwise are a valuable part of the human diet; and (2) fluid
milk products must be readily available and marketed ef-
ficiently to ensure that the people of the United States
receive adequate nourishment; and (3) the dairy indus-
try plays a significant role in the economy of the United
States. [USDA 1990]
These programs are run by groups such as the Fluid Milk
Board, the National Dairy Council (NDC), and the National
Dairy Promotion and Research Board (NDPRB), among
other state and regional organizations. Under a check-off
system, local dairy farmers pay a mandatory fee per unit
of milk produced to support the activities of these groups,
the vast majority of which focus on advertising (USDA
2002).
The USDA is also responsible for developing and pro-
moting dietary guidelines for U.S. citizens. The food pyra-
mid, the most widely disseminated guide to eating in
the United States, includes a separate category for dairy
products and recommends two to three servings of dairy
products per day (www.nal.usda.gov/fnic/Fpyr/pmap.htm).
The primary (though not exclusive) justification for such
a recommendation is based on milk products as rich
sources of calcium. Moreover, even though there are
some "alternative" nonofficial food pyramids designed for
minority populations accessible through the USDA site,
all of them also contain dairy products (www.nal.usda.
gov/fnic/etext/000023.html#xtocid2381818). As Marion
Nestle (2002) noted in her careful study of links between
government diet and nutrition policy and food industries,
several representatives of the dairy industry including the
NDC and NDPRB were on the advisory committee charged
to develop the 2000 Dietary Guidelines for Americans. Not
surprisingly, they opposed any suggestion to include alter-
natives to dairy foods, especially as sources of calcium (such
as fortified soy "milk") in the dairy section.2 Among other
blatant conflations of government policy and the dairy in-
dustry was the 1998 appearance of then-secretary of health
and human services Donna Shalala in one of the popular
"got milk?" advertisements.
Thus, in both of its roles the USDA is involved in
promoting the consumption of dairy products-especially
fresh milk-among all U.S. citizens. However, the agency
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510 American Anthropologist * Vol. 106, No. 3 * September 2004
has been forced to recognize that substantial numbers of
ethnic minorities may have low levels of the enzyme lac-
tase or consider themselves lactose intolerant. With the in-
creasing presence of peoples of Asian, Latin American, or
African descent in the United States, up to 25 percent of
the adult population may be lactase impersistent. The NDC
recognizes that approximately 100 percent of all Native
Americans, 90 percent of all Asian Americans, 80 percent of
all African Americans, 53 percent of all Hispanic Americans,
and 15 percent of all Caucasians are "lactose maldigesters"
(NDC 2003b).
In their publications, the USDA and the various dairy
promotion organizations first make a clear distinction be-
tween their preferred term lactose maldigestion and lactose
intolerance. Lactose intolerance refers to the "gastrointesti-
nal symptoms experienced by some individuals who have
low levels of lactase, the enzyme necessary to digest lac-
tose" (NDC 2003b). These symptoms include nausea, vom-
iting, bloating, cramps, and excess flatulence. However,
they argue that this condition is relatively rare, and that
lactose maldigestion is more common. Importantly, individ-
uals with lactose maldigestion may have low levels of lactase
but do not experience gastrointestinal symptoms following
consumption of lactose-containing dairy products so long
as their physiological capacity to digest lactose is not ex-
ceeded. Thus, according to the NDC, such people can-and
should-consume milk.
The NDC contends that rates of reported lactose
maldigestion are likely to overestimate those who actually
suffer negative symptoms after milk consumption, also in
part because these symptoms may mimic those of other
gastrointestinal illnesses. Individuals who suspect they are
lactose intolerant should be objectively tested by a physi-
cian using the breath hydrogen test, which measures the
amount of hydrogen expelled in a person's breath following
digestion of lactose. The NDC is, however, careful to note
that those tests may generate false positives (again inflating
the rate of "true" intolerance) because the lactose challenge
is much greater than that found in a glass of milk. Fur-
thermore, many individuals may claim to be lactose intol-
erant not because they have physiological symptoms but,
rather, because of negative "culturally based attitudes to-
wards milk learned at a young age" (NDC 2003b). Such
persons may never acquire a taste for milk if they live in
a family that does not make milk a part of their regular
diet.
The USDA and dairy promotion agencies recommend
"several easy steps to overcome lactose intolerance." The
first and most vital step is to see a physician immediately
in order to be correctly diagnosed. If a low level of lactase
activity is verified, an individual must not conclude that
he or she should avoid dairy products but, rather, find cre-
ative ways to include dairy products in the diet. The NDC
warns that "avoiding dairy foods can cause inadequate in-
takes of calcium and many other essential nutrients. A de-
ficiency of calcium increases the risk of developing osteo-
porosis, hypertension, and possibly some types of cancer,"
but "fortunately, tolerance to lactose can be improved by
adjusting the amounts and types of dairy foods consumed"
(NDC 2003a). These modifications include drinking small
amounts of milk with meals to slow the process of absorp-
tion, starting with small servings and slowly working up to
larger quantities in a process that suggests the building of a
tolerance to lactose. Other solutions to intolerance include
consuming aged, hard cheeses, yogurt with active bacterial
cultures, lactose-free milk, or taking over-the-counter lac-
tase enzyme tablets or drops prior to the consumption of
lactose-containing dairy products. Nondairy sources of cal-
cium are denigrated as having much less calcium than milk,
or it is suggested that their calcium is much less bioavailable
than that in milk.3
Nutrition and Dietetics Perspectives
The reach of the U.S. government's nutrition policy is exten-
sive. Its impact is clear in the nutritional recommendations
made by practicing nutritionists and dieticians, as well as in
the food assistance programs that the USDA supports. Orga-
nizations such as the American Dietetics Association (ADA),
the professional unit to which registered dietitians belong;
the American School Food Service Association (ASFSA); and
nutrition textbooks tend to take the approach of the USDA
and NDC. Given that nutritionists and dieticians are those
who provide dietary advice to individuals in clinical, public
health, food assistance program-related, and other settings,
their interpretation of lactase impersistence is likely to have
practical significance.
A popular nutrition text has a separate "nutrition fo-
cus" section on lactose intolerance in which there is dis-
cussion of population variation in the ability to digest lac-
tose, although reduction in lactase activity is described
as a "primary disease" (Wardlaw and Insel 1996). Individ-
uals suspecting lactose intolerance should find out by trial
and error how much lactose they can comfortably tolerate
and
easily adjust the amount of dairy products in their diet.
Such people need not avoid all milk and milk prod-
ucts; nor is this recommended because these foods are
very good sources of calcium, riboflavin, potassium, and
magnesium. Although these four nutrients are present in
other food groups, many people don't eat much of these
alternative sources. [Wardlaw and Insel 1996:75-76]
The ADA presents a "fact sheet" on lactose intoler-
ance, which was supported by a grant from McNeil Con-
sumer Products, makers of Lactaid?. The fact sheet re-
views population variation in lactase production-and, in
an interesting departure from NDC statements-suggests
that lactose intolerance is very common. It does, though,
go on to recommend that individuals adopt the various
strategies outlined by the NDC-for example, consuming
smaller amounts of dairy more frequently or choosing lower
lactose-containing dairy products, but, not surprisingly, two
of its six suggestions include taking exogenous lactase.
Nestle (2002) has noted that among professional nutrition
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Wiley * Biological Diversity and Milk Consumption in the United States 511
associations, the ADA is more likely to promote food indus-
try interests in its publications, and it is one of the links
(the other being the NDC) listed at www.whymilk.com,
the interactive website of the popular "got milk?"
campaign.
The ASFSA, a nonprofit organization of professionals in
school nutrition programs, also vigorously promotes milk
consumption in part through its close association with the
National School Lunch Program. Since the 1946 inception
of the National School Lunch Act, the government has re-
quired that fluid milk be offered as part of meals that are
eligible for federal reimbursement. Note that the National
School Lunch program, like the USDA, has a dual purpose,
as outlined in the Act of 1946:
It is hereby declared to be the policy of Congress, as
a measure of national security, to safeguard the health
and well-being of the Nation's children and to encour-
age the domestic consumption of nutritious agricultural
commodities and other food, by assisting the States,
through grants-in aid and other means, in providing an
adequate supply of food and other facilities for the es-
tablishment, maintenance, operation and expansion of
nonprofit school lunch programs. [USDA 2003]
Twenty years later, private institutions devoted to the care
and education of children were also made eligible for these
federal milk reimbursements. And, in 1968, an amendment
to the Child Nutrition Act was approved that read: "Min-
imum nutritional requirements shall not be construed to
prohibit substitution of foods to accommodate the medi-
cal or other special dietary needs of individual students"
(USDA 2003). Presumably, this covered those with lac-
tose intolerance. Of note is a presentation from the ASFSA
website that celebrates Boston schools' success at promot-
ing lactose-free milk in their food programs, which re-
sulted in increases in milk sales (Focus on Children: Boston
Public Schools 2003); also educational materials from the
NDC are easily accessed though the ASFSA site (www.asfsa.
org .4
The Special Supplemental Nutritional Assistance
Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) was au-
thorized in 1974 to provide subsidies for specific nutrient-
rich foods for pregnant or breastfeeding women and in-
fants and children up to five years of age. Fluid milk
and cheese are featured among the foods that are al-
lowed (others are infant formula, cereal, eggs, dried
beans, peanut butter, tuna fish, and carrots). The major-
ity (over 60 percent) of WIC recipients (which numbered
over eight million in 2002) are minorities--the largest
percentage of which are Hispanics, African Americans,
Asian Americans, and Native Americans, all populations
with high frequencies of lactase impersistence (www.ers.
usda.gov/publications/fanrr27/fanrr27d.pdf). In recogni-
tion of individuals with "special" dietary needs, WIC allows
lactose-reduced or lactose-free milk, or the substitution of
more cheese for milk in its food packages, but no nondairy
substitutes.
Professional Medical Associations
Given that government nutrition policy explicitly targets
milk for consumption by U.S. citizens to maintain optimal
health, how do medical institutions, whose members are
involved in clinical practice, assess the issue of milk con-
sumption and lactase impersistence? Publicly available ma-
terials from three relevant medical organizations (American
Academy of Pediatrics [AAP]; American Academy of Fam-
ily Practitioners [AAFP]; and American College of Gastroen-
terology [ACG]) provide insight into this issue. These groups
all make the crucial distinction between lactose intolerance
and lactase impersistence but tend to focus on lactose intoler-
ance. This makes sense in that from their perspective, lactose
intolerance is the relevant clinical condition; individuals
experiencing uncomfortable or painful symptoms because
of underlying lactase impersistence would be those most
likely seek medical help.
While medical organizations appear to consider lactase
impersistence as "normal" for the human species, citing the
usual surveys of its frequency in different populations, their
language nonetheless tends to medicalize it and treat it as
the deviant condition. For example, the AAP uses the lan-
guage lactose maldigestion, but in the discussion of global
variation, it refers to lactase deficiency:
late-onset lactase deficiency (adult hypolactasia) is a com-
mon disorder. Approximately 90% of adult American
blacks and 60% to 80% of Mexican-Americans, native
American Indians, Asians, and most middle-Eastern and
Mediterranean populations have abnormal findings on
lactose tolerance tests. [AAP 1985, emphasis added]5
Likewise, lactase impersistence is described by the ACG
as: "a shortage of the enzyme lactase, which is nor-
mally produced by the cells that line the small intes-
tine" (www.acg.gi.org/patientinfo/cgp/cgpvol3.html#food,
emphasis added). Note that these are descriptions of lactase
impersistence, not specifically the clinical symptoms asso-
ciated with lactose intolerance.
Unlike the NDC, which recommends an objective
lactose-challenge test by a clinician, medical organizations
tend to favor self-diagnosis of lactose intolerance. In their
educational materials, both the AAFP and ACG recommend
that individuals diagnose themselves by eliminating all
dairy products from their diet for several weeks to ascer-
tain whether this eases their symptoms. This is followed
by a dairy challenge to see if symptoms reappear. If they
do, the "treatment" is simple: Avoid dairy products. How-
ever, they also suggest that by trial and error individuals
should figure out how much of which dairy products they
can tolerate without negative symptoms. Those who find
themselves reacting to most dairy products are advised to
take exogenous lactase before they consume them.
Again, the concern for those who avoid milk products
is that they would not meet their calcium needs. Most medi-
cal organizations recommend dairy products such as yogurt,
cheese, or lactose-reduced milk, especially for children, who
are seen as particularly in need of not only the calcium in
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512 American Anthropologist * Vol. 106, No. 3 * September 2004
dairy products but also the protein, Vitamin D (which is
not an intrinsic part of milk; milk is fortified with Vitamins
A and D), and, in the case of fresh milk, water for hydra-
tion. Other fortified foods, such as orange juice, or dark
green leafy vegetables, legumes, and fish are recommended,
and calcium supplementation is advised for those who
"significantly limit their dietary intake of milk products"
(www.acg.gi.org/patientinfo/cgp/pdf/food_I% 7E 1.pdf).
While the AAP expresses concern that children with
lactase impersistence obtain sufficient calcium, their state-
ment also outlines the potential problems associated with
milk consumption among such children. The nutrients in
milk may not be fully absorbed; if diarrhea results, nutri-
ents are lost and there is a risk of dehydration. Furthermore,
the AAP and others express concern about the use of lac-
tose in medicines such as birth control pills, antacids, and
other prescription and over-the-counter drugs (AAP 1985).
Lactose is used as a filler, an anticaking agent, and a flavor
to make pills more palatable. While only a very few in-
dividuals with severe intolerance are likely to be sensitive
to these small amounts, including lactose among the inac-
tive ingredients in medicines (estimated at up to 20 percent
of prescription drugs and six percent of over-the-counter
medicines; www.gastro.org/public/brochures/lactose.html)
indicates a lack of appreciation for population diversity in
physiological responses to lactose.
Antimilk Groups
Despite overt sponsorship of milk consumption by state
and federal governments, there is vigorous-if not well-
coordinated-antimilk sentiment, suggesting that milk's
merits are not entirely uncontested within the United
States. Two primers for this "movement" with intention-
ally sensationalist titles are Milk: The Deadly Poison by Robert
Cohen (1997), the self-proclaimed "notmilkman" who also
maintains a website www.notmilk.com, and Dont Drink
Your Milk The Frightening New Medical Facts about the World's
Most Overrated Nutrient by Frank Oski (1977). The Physi-
cian's Committee for Responsible Medicine (PCRM) and
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) are two
organizations actively promoting the message that milk is
neither an ideal nor necessary food.6 Both groups cite stud-
ies implicating milk consumption as a contributing factor to
numerous health problems (from prostate and breast cancer
to osteoporosis; see www.pcrm.org or www.milksucks.com).
Lactose intolerance is on the list of potential problems as-
sociated with milk consumption; as with clinicians, antim-
ilk groups are more concerned with negative physiological
outcomes and less interested in lactase impersistence per se.
The latter is folded into lactose intolerance in this description:
LACTOSE INTOLERANCE: Fifty million Americans experi-
ence intestinal discomfort after consuming milk, cheese,
or ice cream (Postgraduate Medicine 1994:95). Symptoms
include stomach pain, gas, and diarrhea.
Lactose, a milk sugar, is made up of two other sugars,
glucose and galactose. Galactose has been identified as a
causative factor in heart disease, cataracts, and glaucoma.
Most adults "lack" the enzyme, lactase, to break down
lactose. Instead, lactose is broken down by bacteria in the
lower intestines. Their own body wastes combine with
those sugars to ferment into toxins causing bloating and
cramps.
Once a correct diagnosis is established, there is a simple
cure: NOTMILK
In April of 1999, the Journal of Clinical Gastroenterology
(volume 28:3) reported: "Introduction of a lactose-free
dietary regime relieves symptoms in most patients... who
remain largely unaware of the relationship between food
intake and symptoms." [Cohen 1998]
Unlike the dairy industry, which claims that the preva-
lence of lactose intolerance is overestimated, Cohen suggests
that it is underdiagnosed as a source of gastrointestinal com-
plaints. And, instead of following the "simple steps" that
the dairy industry outlines for individuals with symptoms
of intolerance, the solution is straightforward: Avoid dairy
products. Because the antimilk contingent considers there
to be sufficient evidence that milk may cause rather than
prevent various health problems, this avoidance is not dele-
terious but, in fact, beneficial to one's health.
A related resource, accessible from www.nomilk.com,
is the website of Steve Carper, author of Milk: Not for Every
Body (1995; the site can also be accessed at http://ourworld.
compuserve.com/homepages/stevecarper/). On Carper's
"lactose planet," the lactose intolerance clearinghouse has
an extensive array of information, much of which reads
like the discussion in an introductory biological anthropol-
ogy textbook. Again a clear distinction is made between
lactose intolerance and lactase impersistence, and the evolu-
tionary explanation for lactase persistence is presented (i.e.,
pastoralist or Vitamin D-deficient populations gained some
advantage by drinking milk). Carper is not opposed to milk
consumption per se but wants to alert the public about the
myriad potential problems associated with milk consump-
tion and provide information on alternatives.
The clash between the antimilk platform of the PCRM
and the promilk agenda of USDA and NDC came to a head
in two articles in the Journal of the National Medical Associa-
tion, a journal devoted to health issues that concern peoples
of African descent (www.nmanet.org). At the heart of the
debate was the policy significance of biological variation in
adult lactase production. Authors from the PCRM alleged
that the Dietary Guidelines for Americans are biased against
minorities insofar as dairy products are recommended for
all U.S. citizens (Bertron et al. 1999). They concluded that
the Guidelines
encourage dairy products for daily consumption by all
Americans, despite differences in tolerances for dairy
products, preferences for other calcium-rich foods and
susceptibilities to osteoporosis, as well as the lack of sci-
entific evidence of benefit from dairy products for mem-
bers of racial minorities. In this regard, federal nutrition
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Wiley * Biological Diversity and Milk Consumption in the United States 513
policies do not yet address the needs of all Americans.
[Bertron et al. 1999:156]
In this case, recognition of significant population variation
in lactase persistence and relatively high frequencies of im-
persistence among minorities in the U.S. warrants rethink-
ing the explicit national policy of encouraging-indeed,
mandating-dairy product consumption by all. Those with
different digestive biologies are being forced to conform to
European-derived norms of dietary behavior, which the au-
thors contend are associated with increased risk for various
diseases such as osteoporosis and ovarian cancer, among
others. This charge echoed a 1979 lawsuit in which the
Federal Trade Commission sued the California Milk Produc-
ers Advisory Board for its advertising campaign "Everybody
needs milk." However, the judge ruled that there was insuf-
ficient evidence that milk was a significant threat to indi-
viduals with lactose intolerance, arguing further that
Milk is one of the most nutritious foods in the nation's
diet, and from the standpoint of the population as a
whole, or even significant population groups, is literally
"essential, necessary and needed." The withdrawl of milk
from any major population group would amount to a
nutritional disaster. [Katz 1981:267]
A response to PCRM appeared in the same journal three
years later in an article titled "Overcoming the Barrier of
Lactose Intolerance to Reduce Health Disparities," authored
by NDC researchers (Jarvis and Miller 2002). In this coun-
terclaim, the authors argued that the relatively high rates of
lactose maldigestion and the concomitant low milk intake
among minority populations are significant contributors to
their higher rates of several chronic diseases (osteoporosis,
hypertension, stroke, colon cancer). The basis of the claim
is evidence suggesting that calcium and "other dairy related
nutrients" may reduce the risk of these diseases, although
at present most studies presenting such results have relied
on correlations and retrospective data, rather than demon-
strating a direct causal link between milk consumption and
lower risk of these diseases. Thus, to reduce disparities be-
tween the relative health advantages enjoyed by whites,
"Physicians can help reduce the disease burden and health
care costs in minority populations by committing them-
selves to helping their clients overcome the barrier of lactose
intolerance" (Jarvis and Miller 2002:64). This is to be ac-
complished by providing such clients with "several simple
strategies that allow those with low lactase activity to con-
sume dairy products," as outlined previously. Furthermore,
in a separate publication, the NDC argues that although
"Many minorities have low levels of lactase ... stereotyping
all minorities as lactose intolerant is inappropriate" (NDC
2003b). Thus, the claim of bias against minorities evident
in recommendations to consume milk is turned on its head
to suggest that individuals who fail to consume milk be-
cause of fears of symptoms (often misplaced, the NDC re-
searchers claim) from lactose maldigestion are at risk of ma-
jor chronic diseases and well-known health deficits because
of their dietary choices, as well as to accuse the authors
from the PCRM of racial stereotyping. The NDC materials
explicitly confirm that the Dietary Guidelines are for all U.S.
citizens, that dairy foods are required to provide nutrients
not found in other types of foods, and that minorities are
especially at risk of calcium-deficiency diseases as a function
of lower dairy consumption (NDC 2003b).
DISCUSSION
At the heart of these various stories about lactase persis-
tence/impersistence are two key issues. One is the nature
and significance of biological diversity in lactase produc-
tion in adulthood and its relationship to milk consump-
tion. The second, and related, issue is the appropriateness
of milk in the diet of contemporary U.S. citizens, which
should be reflected in food and nutrition policies. All of
the stories contain some appreciation for biological diver-
sity of adult lactase production. They acknowledge that lac-
tase impersistence is very common in the world and that
there are substantial minorities within the U.S. who are lac-
tase impersistent. Some go further in describing the evo-
lutionary scenarios that might have generated differences
in lactase activity, focusing on the nutritional benefits that
might have accrued to populations that were able to exploit
fresh milk. Thus, the older advertising slogan "Drink Milk
for Fitness" had an unintentional (?) link to evolutionary
explanations, but, of course, it went further by making this
a blanket statement that suggested that everyone's physi-
cal and, perhaps, Darwinian fitness might be enhanced by
milk consumption. While it makes sense that the dairy in-
dustry would want to endorse this concept, with the ex-
ception of the antimilk contingents, milk continues to be
recommended by diverse institutions, albeit in forms and
quantities that individuals find physiologically acceptable.
This suggests the entrenched nature of milk in U.S. culi-
nary culture, national identity, and agricultural economy.
As Melanie DuPuis (2002) has shown, even in the 19th cen-
tury when milk consumption was more often than not as-
sociated with infectious disease from the unsanitary con-
ditions of its production and distribution, it had already
achieved the status of "nature's perfect food." Milk's posi-
tive symbolism is overdetermined: its white color, associa-
tion with things pastoral and maternal and the innocence
of babies, and its biblical references (several being odes to a
"land that floweth with milk and honey"), among others.
In the 20th century, with improvements in sanitation (pas-
teurization, refrigeration) and discoveries in nutrition, one
nutrient in particular-calcium-has come to symbolize the
inherent goodness of milk. The current justification for pro-
moting milk rests almost exclusively on this mineral, and
the United States, it is proclaimed, is facing a "calcium cri-
sis" (NDC 2003b). This crisis-whether real or imagined-
correlates with a decline in milk consumption and evidence
that most U.S. citizens, milk drinkers included, consume
less than the Recommended Daily Allowance (RDA) for cal-
cium (the average is 801 milligrams, while the RDA is at
least 1,000 milligrams; USDA 1998).7 Whether the RDA for
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514 American Anthropologist * Vol. 106, No. 3 * September 2004
calcium is too high or too low is a matter of some contention
(Anderson 2001; Matkovic and Ilich 1993), but suffice it to
say here that the solution to the calcium "crisis," at least
according to the USDA and NDC, is to consume more milk
rather than consume other foods rich in calcium-such as
fish bones, dark green leafy vegetables, nuts, or legumes.
The USDA notes that milk and dairy products make up 73
percent of the calcium available in the U.S. food supply and,
hence, dairy is the best and most readily available source
of calcium (NDC 2003b). It should be noted that hunter-
gatherers living on wild foods are able to consume ample
quantities of calcium (above the U.S. RDA) from nondairy
sources (Eaton et al. 1999). On the other hand, it appears
that much of the world's population consumes well below
the U.S. RDA for calcium without apparent detriment (Food
and Agriculture Organization 2002).
By and large, aside from the allegations of the antimilk
groups, the NDC and the USDA constitute the main voice
in shaping the dominant rhetoric about biological diver-
sity in lactase production. Their story is constructed around
the inherent goodness of milk and the benefits of a biolog-
ical make-up that allows for daily consumption of abun-
dant quantities. As DuPuis noted, the apparent superiority
achieved by European dairying cultures during the colonial
period was in part attributed to their dairy-based diet. She
quotes the famous nutritionist E. V. McCollum in National
Dairy Council advertisements from the 1920s:
The people who have achieved, who have become large,
strong, vigorous people, who have reduced their infant
mortality, who have the best trades in the world, who
have an appreciation for art, literature and music, who
are progressive in science and every activity of the human
intellect are the people who have used liberal amounts of
milk and its products. [DuPuis 2002:117]
Not only was drinking milk and consuming other dairy
products seen as superior, it was also viewed as normal
and normative. This perspective endured through the 1960s
when studies began to demonstrate population variation in
lactase persistence, with the modal global form being lactase
impersistence. However, despite widespread recognition of
this distribution, lactase impersistence remains implicitly
pathological, as evidenced in widely used terminologies
and definitions. Such medicalizing of non-Western, partic-
ularly African biologies appears in the colonial period and
remains evident in the example of lactase impersistence (cf.
Comaroff and Comaroff 1992; Gould 1981; see Tapper 1995
for discussion of the analogous example of sickle-cell ane-
mia). To be fair, lactose intolerance, which may result from
lactase impersistence, is a cluster of uncomfortable physi-
ological symptoms for which a person might seek medical
help, but it is important to acknowledge that these only
manifest in the context of milk consumption.
The significance of biological variation in lactase per-
sistence is downplayed by the USDA and dairy industry.
First, they consider it to be an "overblown" issue, citing ev-
idence that lactase impersistence is not always associated
with symptoms of lactose intolerance. Although they ac-
knowledge that a large portion of adults-particularly in mi-
nority populations in the United States-are likely to have
low levels of lactase, this should not prevent them from
consuming milk. Much research sponsored by the NDC has
been focused on determining just how much milk people
who self- or medically diagnose lactose maldigestion can
consume; their published studies show that up to two or
even three cups of milk can be consumed by individuals
testing positive for lactose maldigestion, as long as these are
spread throughout the day (Suarez et al. 1997, 1998). An-
thropological studies have also noted discordance between
lactase status and symptoms of intolerance. For example,
Susan Cheer and John Allen (1997) found that Tokelau
islanders in New Zealand had high frequencies of lactase
impersistence, as diagnosed in breath hydrogen tests, but
lactase status was not highly correlated with either con-
sumption of dairy products or perceived symptoms of lac-
tose intolerance.
From the USDA and NDC's perspective, avoidance of
milk is not an acceptable strategy, regardless of one's lac-
tase status. To consume milk in the United States is to be
healthy; to avoid milk is to put oneself at risk of a variety of
long-term ailments. Thus, diversity in adult lactase produc-
tion is essentially meaningless for most individuals who,
they suggest, can happily consume milk and be healthier
for it. At the same time, the NDC retains a vision of lactase
impersistence as problematic, not so much because it may
provoke gastrointestinal symptoms but, rather, because it
may result in reduced milk consumption. The very term
maldigestion suggests a malady, and the following passage
describes the deviant nature of this condition: "Data from
most studies suggest that individuals with primary lactose
deficiency consume less milk than those who digest milk
normally" (Jarvis and Miller 2002:58, emphasis added). So
while they acknowledge underlying biological variation, it
is of no practical significance; it should not be a barrier to
consuming milk and enjoying the health benefits it confers
to those who have a history of drinking milk and continue
to do so regularly. One can and should "overcome" this bi-
ological deficit to achieve full participation in U.S. culinary
culture and its self-evident salutary consequences.
Because biological variation is discounted, the NDC
suggests that it is negative cultural attitudes about milk that
reduce its consumption by minority groups. Arthur Whaley
noted this same trend in epidemiological studies: "Eth-
nic/racial groups are often seen as having misperceptions
and unhealthy behaviors learned through cultural social-
ization that increase their risk for adverse health outcomes"
(2003:738). Hence, individuals in such groups should be
educated about the value of milk in their diets and en-
act behavioral changes; the source, value, or integrity of
diverse "cultural attitudes" are dismissed. Drinking milk
is no less than full enculturation into U.S. life. Yet the
increasing diversity of the U.S. public must be acknowl-
edged and celebrated to some extent, especially if the goal
is to sell more milk and reverse the decades-old downward
trend in milk consumption. Thus, efforts to embrace that
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Wiley * Biological Diversity and Milk Consumption in the United States 515
diversity while simultaneously unifying it into a common
milk-drinking experience have escalated.8 It is impossible
to avoid the images in popular culture from the wildly
successful "got milk?" advertising campaign, which fea-
ture famous role models of various ethnic backgrounds
sporting milk mustaches.9 This campaign has both in-
creased milk sales and reached iconic status. This prac-
tice is not lost on antimilk groups, who complain that it
is misleading because of the relatively high frequency of
lactase impersistence/lactose intolerance among groups of
African, Asian, or Latin American descent (and who have
also subverted the "got milk?" slogan in various ways; see
www.milksucks.com). Given the rapid growth of this de-
mographic group, the NDC explicitly targets Hispanics in
its current advertising strategy (USDA 2002); by using mi-
nority role models, it hopes to instill a positive association
with milk and encourage milk consumption among minor-
ity children. Given that food preferences are established in
childhood (Rozin 1983, 1990), this strategy should pay off
for the dairy industry in the short and long term.
So how do we construct reasonable food policy based
on our current understanding of population variation in
adult lactase production? Both the NDC and PCRM have
valid claims-that to characterize minorities as lactase im-
persistent (or lactose intolerant) is to engage in racial stereo-
typing and that to mandate milk consumption for all U.S.
citizens is discriminatory against those with lactase imper-
sistence (and especially those with lactose intolerance). To
some extent the claims and counterclaims about the health-
iness of milk are irrelevant to this discussion, although it is
a travesty to attribute health deficits among minorities to
their "failure" to drink milk. Milk is neither the elixir of life,
whose consumption will surely prevent chronic disease, nor
is biology destiny-drinking moderate amounts of milk is
not likely to be seriously problematic for most people with
lactase impersistence. Various lactose-reduced options ex-
ist for those who wish to consume dairy, but at the same
time, an increasingly diverse U.S. public is being led to be-
lieve that they must consume milk to be healthy, and tradi-
tional cuisines and alternate sources of calcium are largely
discredited.
CONCLUSION
It is heartening to see widespread acknowledgment of hu-
man biological variation in adult lactase activity among
policy-making institutions in the United States. The evo-
lutionary stories that go along with it have received less
attention, except insofar as they acknowledge that some
benefit accrued to certain populations that were able to ex-
ploit milk throughout life. These benefits are hailed and em-
phasized by those institutions promoting milk; they are less
evident in the stories told by those who question milk's cul-
tural and biological supremacy. The biology that facilitates
ongoing milk consumption is likewise celebrated; other di-
gestive physiologies are seen as abnormal or deficient in
some way and need to be "overcome."
However, in achieving such broad acceptance, the
anthropological context for appreciating biological and
cultural diversity is easily lost, especially when it threatens
to thwart marketing goals or undermine accepted wisdom,
in this case, about the inherent goodness of milk for "every
body." When it comes to describing biological variation,
the axiom that biological variation within populations is
greater than variation between populations is rarely appre-
ciated, as populations are labeled as lactose intolerant or lac-
tase persistent. Yet in the quest for examples of patterned ge-
netic variation among human populations, work in biologi-
cal anthropology may promote this interpretation, reifying
population differences while downplaying the tremendous
amount of individual variation in response to lactose. This
is where the evolutionary perspective is most useful, in the
sense that it describes the process by which genetic change
comes about and the important social and natural environ-
mental factors that generate such change without reference
to discrete population groupings.
This example further illustrates the utility of a biocul-
tural perspective in anthropology, and one that attempts to
understand how human biology, especially human biologi-
cal variation, is constructed and elaborated within a cultural
context. Here, biological variation in lactase production in
adulthood runs up against a dietary culture characterized
by extensive use of dairy products and a political economic
context in which the USDA and dairy industry ally to in-
crease milk consumption among a U.S. public of increas-
ing biological, ethnic, and dietary diversity. The story that
they tell about lactase persistence has become the domi-
nant story; challenges to it are trivialized or described as
subversive. This axis of biological variation, so celebrated
by biological anthropologists, is relegated to a somewhat
interesting yet, ultimately, meaningless fact, except insofar
as it threatens to impede full enculturation into a dairy-
consuming culture.
ANDREA S. WILEY Program in Anthropology, James
Madison University, Harrisonburg, VA 22807
NOTES
Acknowledgments. I gratefully acknowledge the help of a group of
excellent anthropology students atJames Madison University, most
especially Adam Southall, for his careful research and comments
on this manuscript. Likewise, Angel Shockley, Naheed Ahmed,
Haley Thrift, and Jessica Fowler contributed useful insights. Kim
Butler's thesis work on milk advertising was particularly helpful.
Ric Thompson, Alex Brewis, and Richard Lippke all provided valu-
able feedback on earlier drafts of this article. The editors of AA were
very helpful in recasting the article for the broadest anthropological
audience.
1. A lack of consistency in terminology is evident in introductory
biological anthropology textbooks. In a sample of four textbooks,
two referred to lactase impersistence simply as lactose intolerance
(Jurmain et al. 2000; Relethford 2003); one referred to it as lac-
tase deficiency (Stein and Rowe 2000); and another referred to it as
low digestive capacity (Boyd and Silk 2003).
2. In a preliminary proposal for new revised Dietary Guidelines,
calcium-enriched soy products are added as an alternative
in the dairy category (see www.usda.gov/cnpp/pyramid-
update/FGP%20docs/TABLE%201.pdf). It remains to be seen
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516 American Anthropologist * Vol. 106, No. 3 * September 2004
whether this will be kept in the final version, although Dean
Foods, one of the largest dairy corporations, also owns Morningstar,
which makes Sun Soy, a soymilk brand.
3. Robert Heaney and Connie Weaver (1990) found that the
calcium available in kale was higher than that in milk. Other
sources disparage the calcium density and bioavailability of veg-
etable foods: "A person would need to consume 8 cups of spinach,
nearly 5 cups of red beans, or 2 cups of broccoli to get the same
amount of calcium absorbed from 1 cup of milk" (NDC 2003b).
4. It should also be noted that many schools have "pouring rights"
contracts with soft drink corporations, and students often choose
soft drinks over milk at school. Given the high sugar content of soda
and its potential contribution to the current epidemic of childhood
obesity, this issue is a key concern of ASFSA members.
5. These population groupings are regularly used in descriptions
of variation in lactase activity in the United States. That these are
diverse kinds of groups, which reflect commonly used national,
regional, "racial," or ethnic identities is not considered.
6. These groups have been described as "the most immediately
dangerous," because of their sometimes terrorist tactics (Heaney
2001:160). Further, their influence is decried:
We confront a recent, very modern efflorescence of mil-
itant groups that oppose all use of animal products and
aim to effect a nutritional policy outcome similar to that
of the creationists with regard to evolution. Those who
care about nutrition, those who think nutrition impor-
tant for the public health general, need to realize that
the present-day skirmishes may be only the first wave of
a growing battle. [Heaney 2001:163]
7. This decline in milk consumption is usually traced to the rise in
the consumption of soda, bottled water, juice, and sports drinks.
Also, while U.S. citizens widely acknowledge that milk "does a body
good," this earlier advertising slogan had little positive impact on
milk consumption. Only after the initiation of the "got milk?" cam-
paign did milk consumption rebound somewhat (Manning 1999).
8. Promilk attitudes and governmental policies are increasingly
evident on a global scale. Thus, immigrants to the United States
may already come with attitudes shaped by these policies from
their home countries.
9. Recently, some have started wearing lactose-reduced milk
mustaches.
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