Saturday, January 30, 2010

Food Esthetics, Food Ethics

But if there is a food politics, there are also a food esthetics and a food ethics, neither of which is dissociated from politics. Like industrial sex, industrial eating has become a degraded, poor, and paltry thing. Our kitchens and other eating places more and more resemble filling stations, as our homes more and more resemble motels. "Life is not very interesting," we seem to have decided. "Let its satisfactions be minimal, perfunctory, and fast." We hurry through our meals to go to work and hurry through our work in order to "recreat" ourselves in the evenings and on weekends and vacations. And then we hurry, with the greatest possible speed and noise and violence, through our recreation—for what? To eat the billionth hamburger at some fast-food joint hellbent on increasing the "quality" of our life? And all this is carried out in a remarkable obliviousness to the causes and effects, the possibilities and the purposes, of the life of the body in this world.
(Wendell Berry, "The Pleasures of Eating" (1989), in Bringing It to the Table—On Farming and Food, pp. 229-230 [2009])

2 comments:

  1. What a great quote, William - Ben

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  2. Wow, it's so clear. Thanks. I'll take Wendell Berry quotes whenever you come across em!
    Daniel

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