A Blog by Jonathan Low

 

Nov 26, 2015

Why We Eat Together

Happy Thanksgiving. JL

Louise Fresco reports in The Atlantic :

“Dinner’s ready!” The call represented the most important moment of the day, a confirmation of family life, of the caring role of the mother and the authority of the father. The table is a place of memory where we become aware of who we are and with whom we are. The human is the only species that surrounds its food with rituals and takes account of hunger among others who are not direct relatives. The table makes us human.
Between us and our ancestors, who tore apart their half-raw, half-burnt meat with their teeth, or the women of Mesopotamia who ground flour to bake bread, food traditions have piled up and up. Food is no longer a matter of survival, nor purely power; it confers the status and identity with which we distinguish ourselves from others and at the same time gives us the sense of community we seek. Those who eat as we do have a connection with us; they are as we are.
“Dinner’s ready!” is the traditional cry with which Western mothers used to call their playing children indoors and grab the attention of their newspaper-reading husbands. “Dinner’s ready!” We’re about to eat, so drop what you’re doing. The call represented the most important moment of the day, a confirmation of family life, of the caring role of the mother and the authority of the father. So it went on for many generations, in many countries.

1 comments:

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