Food Politics & the Moral Effects of Spaghetti
Adam Gopnik has compared le fooding, the movement to shake up French food, to two other movements: the New Wave and Futurism. The first analogy nails the way that le fooding seeks to marry American looseness to French style. It’s the second analogy that bothers me. The Futurists had very definite ideas about food, and they didn’t really involve rule-breaking for the sake of fun.
The 1930 Manifesto of Futurist Cooking denounced pasta for inducing conservative traits. Spaghetti is no food for fighters, the Futurists complained:
It may be that a diet of cod, roast beef and steamed pudding is beneficial to the English, cold cuts and cheese to the Dutch and sauerkraut, smoked [salt] pork and sausage to the Germans, but pasta is not beneficial to the Italians. For example it is completely hostile to the vivacious spirit and passionate, generous, intuitive soul of the Neapolitans. If these people have been heroic fighters, inspired artists, awe-inspiring orators, shrewd lawyers, tenacious farmers it was in spite of their voluminous daily plate of pasta. When they eat it they develop that typical ironic and sentimental scepticism [sic] which can often cut short their enthusiasm.
A highly intelligent Neapolitan Professor, Signorelli, writes: ‘In contrast to bread and rice, pasta is a food which is swallowed, not masticated. Such starchy food should mainly be digested in the mouth by the saliva but in this case the task of transformation is carried out by the pancreas and the liver. This leads to an interrupted equilibrium in these organs. From such disturbances derive lassitude, pessimism, nostalgic inactivity and neutralism.’
Pastasciutta, 40% less nutritious than meat, fish or pulses, ties today’s Italians with its tangled threads to Penelope’s slow looms and to somnolent old sailing ships in search of wind. Why let its massive heaviness interfere with the immense network of short long waves which Italian genius has thrown across oceans and continents? Why let it block the path of those landscapes of colour form sound which circumnavigate the world thanks to radio and television? The defenders of pasta are shackled by its ball and chain like convicted lifers or carry its ruins in their stomachs like archaeologists. And remember too that the abolition of pasta will free Italy from expensive foreign grain and promote the Italian rice industry.
I’d like to believe that a favorite food of mine induces skepticism and ironic detachment, but I remain, well, skeptical. Before we dismiss the Futurist views of food, it’s worth noting that the way Futurists used nutritional concerns to diagnose a national moral malaise bears a strong resemblance to the Cruncy-Con critique of our fast-food nation.
Despite these efforts, food debates in America still have a lot more to do with class than they do with politics proper. This is a shame. As strange as as the Futurist manifesto on food is, its hallucinatory flights of fancy articulate a real alternative political vision. There’s a lot more to be said about that kind of food politics that there is for tiresome insinuations about the snobbery of those who eat brie and sip Chablis and the vulgarity of those who don’t.
I liked the article, but (just like the author, it seems) I still understand what Le Fooding is a lot less than I understand Futurism and the New Wave. Cutting away the BS, it seems like food criticism that is more concerned with quality and originality than with decor and “standards”. Which doesn’t strike me as a particularly innovative idea, at least in terms of American food critics, who often take as much pleasure in finding a delicious but grimy dive as they do a pricey Michelin. Is there something deeper to it than that?
While we’re on the topic of interesting food writing, I would recommend meatpaper – an art magazine about meat.Report
@trizzlor, I guess the whole point of the comparison to the New Wave is to highlight how le fooding is an attempt to “Americanize” French food, or, better yet, French tastes.Report
It might be that the French context doesn’t translate so well. The article says that the goal is “in part a move to épater la bourgeoisie”. In French culture, it’s still very easy to actually shock the bourgeoisie with one’s gastronomic tastes. I don’t know that it’s actually so easy to do that in America, even if food debates come down to class there too. How would you go about doing that in the US?Report
@Rufus F., Off the top of my head, it seems like the US has been doing this for a while now with $100 burgers (w/ truffle) and the recent popularity (in NYC at least) of high-class pizza places. Although, one could argue that this is a way of elevating prole food in the least shocking way possible.Report
Why not cite what Futurist food was really famous for? I mean, of course, Chicken with Ball Bearings:
You want crazy? They’ve got crazy.Report
You’ll like <a href="this article. Are there any ideas around Cato for what a libertian cuisine would look like?Report
Something off with the link: http://www.cabinetmagazine.org/issues/10/anti-pasta.phpReport
@Matt Schmitz, There’s this, about the Reason restaurant:
One of the things that makes selling libertarianism difficult is that ultimately we don’t have a set vision of the future to dramatize. We have a bunch of oppositional stuff in the here and now, and a deep sense that innovation is fundamentally unpredictable. But still awesome.Report
And let’s see about getting that link right, too.Report
@Jason Kuznicki, I love the idea of Kelo desserts.Report
@Jason Kuznicki,
I’d say something like a mall food court. There are a couple of counters under signs with names you’ve never heard of before (I recommend these places above the others), there are a couple of counters under signs with names you’ve only associated with food courts but not ever seen in the wild, and, sigh, a McDonalds with, sigh, the longest line in the food court.Report
Jaybird, in this comment I could almost mistake you for an anti-libertarian!Report
@Matthew Schmitz, I am a huge fan of people being allowed to exercise their own moral agency. I am consistently distressed by the moral choices they make when allowed to exercise their own moral agency.Report
Er, did I say “moral choices”?
I ought have said “aesthetic choices”.
I regret the error.Report
I am slightly obsessed by how most of my fellow conservatives cannot discuss food without going berserk over class consciousness and, of course, resentment. I concluded that anybody who judges someone as the Enemy because they like French cheese is a cultural Marxist, no matter how right-wing they profess to be, and therefore a mindless despiser of excellence. And I fart in their general direction.Report
Attempts to politicize food are, in the long run, futile. Only religions manage to actually force people to eat/not eat this or that. (BTW, Thou Shalt Not Eat Clams – the Old Testament forbids it!)Report