The Parliament Magazine

Going with your gut: the intersecti­on of food and politics

Fabio Parasecoli tells Emma Harper about his latest book, Gastronati­vism, which digs into how politician­s and policymake­rs can use food as an ideologica­l weapon

- Gastronati­vism: Food, Identity, Politics Author: Fabio Parasecoli Publisher: Columbia University Press

Back in 2004, members of the Lega Nord party gathered in the northern Italian city of Como and handed out bowls of polenta – a porridge of ground maize our and a quintessen­tial staple of the northern Italian diet – mixed with local cheese and butter. Not your average case of putting on bread and circuses, the event was a performanc­e of anti-immigrant sentiment: plastered on walls across the city were posters reading “Yes to polenta, no to couscous.” The latter, a common ingredient in

North A ica, served as a substitute for migrants, who began to come in greater numbers to Italy in the 1990s.

It is a prime example of what academic Fabio Parasecoli terms “gastronati­vism,” the ideologica­l use of food in politics to advance ideas about who does and who does not belong to a community. Introducin­g and elaboratin­g on the concept is the focus of his latest book, Gastronati­vism: Food, Identity, Politics.

“I was a little wary of adding another word to the lexicon of food studies,” he tells The Parliament. “But then there was nothing that looked at this sort of porosity, of this permeabili­ty of the di erent levels,” by which he means the local (the focus of studies re-evaluating local food traditions), the national

(the focus of research on gastronati­onalism, or the use of food to promote nationalis­m) and the global, at least as it relates to trade.

Parasecoli observes that despite being siloed in terms of academic study, to him these three levels were seemingly linked to one another. “I was noticing these

“We spend a lot of time thinking and figuring out things, we need to be better at sharing our knowledge”

connection­s, these parallels, these repeating dynamics, I wanted to see if there was something there,” he explains. “I tried to look at the forest, if there is a forest, rather than looking very closely at each tree.”

The decision to take a bird’s eye view is risky and, ankly, re eshing om someone in academia. And such a bold choice pays o : Gastronati­vism documents the wildly di erent political positions and reactions adopted in response to the structure and ows of the global food system, itself a product of neoliberal globalisat­ion.

Based on ee trade and meant to achieve the unrestrict­ed ow of goods, these policies, which became prevalent in the late 80s, created clear winners and losers and have been subject to pushback, particular­ly since the nancial crash of 2008. According to Parasecoli, the embrace of food as an ideologica­l tool has been used by conservati­ves and progressiv­es alike, albeit to di erent ends. He consequent­ly posits that gastronati­vism manifests as either exclusiona­ry or non-exclusiona­ry.

Non-exclusiona­ry gastronati­vism is focused on extending rights to the disen anchised and the oppressed. This can take the form of anti-globalisat­ion e orts, the food sovereignt­y movement, and pushes to reform the existing food system to make it more just and inclusive. “Usually everybody’s invited to be part of those movements, even if the enemy is clear,” Parasecoli says. “That’s why I didn’t call it straight up inclusiona­ry because there is still a de nite enemy.”

Exclusiona­ry gastronati­vism,

on the other hand, occurs when communitie­s feel threated by internal or external forces, circle the wagons and try to limit access to the perceived privileges that come with being part of the in-group. Lega Nord saying “no” to couscous, “yes” to polenta symbolises this approach, which is easily co-opted in authoritar­ian and autocratic projects.

“For those who feel their daily life threatened by forces that are di cult to understand and on which they have little control, as it happens when facing neoliberal globalisat­ion, the past becomes something to prize and safeguard, a source of pride, and an anchor for the reproducti­on and the defence of cultural identities,” Parasecoli writes.

Currently a professor of food studies at New York University, the Italian native is up ont in the preface to Gastronati­vism that he is “part of the privileged, cosmopolit­an, educated elite that populisms despise.”

But his varied and internatio­nal work history – he earned a PhD in agricultur­al sciences at Hohenheim University in Germany, reported on politics om the Middle East and Asia for European publicatio­ns and served as US correspond­ent for Gambero Rosso, Italy’s authoritat­ive food and wine magazine – buttresses his quali cations for undertakin­g such an expansive investigat­ion.

“I’ve always had an interest in food and politics, more om a cultural, social point of view,” Parasecoli tells The Parliament. While he had previously written about the intersecti­on of food and politics in Italy, a few years ago he began noticing an uptick in illiberal and undemocrat­ic tendencies in government­s across the globe. “I started observing the repetition of certain dynamics, of certain themes, even sometimes the repetition of certain words, of expression­s, in places as diverse as India and Russia, Brazil and the US. And I was like, hold on, something is going on here,” he says.

A er deciding to pursue the idea as a book project, he made it a priority to use language and themes that would be accessible to a non-academic audience.

“Now that I’m a full professor with tenure, I can write for audiences that are not my 15 colleagues in the eld,” explains Parasecoli, a proli c writer who has published on topics ranging om the history of food in Italy to place-based labelling and marketing systems.

“And I think it’s also an important role for academics. We spend a lot of time thinking and guring out things, we need to be better at sharing our knowledge and making it relevant in civil society debates,” he adds.

Gastronati­vism makes the case for rooting academic work in everyday life and zooming out to think globally, even if it means wrestling with uidity and running the risk of falling into generaliti­es. Parasecoli, however, manages to connect the dots, a re ection of the many years of scholarly investigat­ion and eldwork he has undertaken.

In addition to linking movements that appear quite disparate, outlining the various ways nation-focused politics interact (and at times clash) with gastronati­vism, and analysing the relationsh­ip between food and migrants, he also makes the case in this book for why food is so useful as a political tool.

“Through food – which is part of us, we ingest it, it becomes us – we can think of the world in di erent ways that do not need to be mediated by much reasoning or research. It’s something that you feel in your guts,” he says. Acting on instinct or a hunch is also part of the contempora­ry political discourse.

When Lega Nord pitted polenta against couscous in Como, claiming the former as the “true” food of Italians, the historical accuracy of such a claim was immaterial. “If you think about it, polenta has been in Italy for a much shorter time than couscous,” Parasecoli says, explaining how corn only made its way to Europe in the 16th century, while couscous has been in Sicily since at least the 10th century, when the Arabs ruled the island.

“That’s the point that I make over and over in the book: reality doesn’t matter. To a certain extent, facts don’t matter. History doesn’t matter,” he adds. Gastronati­vism is about communicat­ing and building community based on gut instinct.

Gastronati­vism: Food, Identity, Politics, published by Columbia University Press, July, 2022

 ?? ?? Fabio Parasecoli, author of Gastronati­vism
Fabio Parasecoli, author of Gastronati­vism
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