1 My 'Vietnamese food' conundrum Sun Mar 10, 2013 2:16 am
Shad
It's 2am. My question is:
If you were to eat a Vietnamese person, does that mean you ate Vietnamese food?
The nationality, of course, is irrelevant - it just happened to be the one in question during the conversation I was having when this thought occurred to me. So no offence to War.
But yeah. I'm talking about food in its broadest definition here. That is, anything with any nutritional value whatsoever. So, like, anything.
However, I think that what defines 'Vietnamese food' or food attributed to any nationality/culture is that it's prepared/reaches some state at which it has properties unique to that country/culture. Similarly, a Vietnamese person has some qualities, either biological or mental, that sets them apart from other nationalities.
So if some Vietnamese person (either native or simply raised to be whatever it is to be 'Vietnamese', which is another issue) decides to prepare some bizarre, never-done-before dish like a potato salad with shredded sandpaper and bull testicles mixed through it, that dish becomes Vietnamese food. Well, extremely unpopular Vietnamese food, enjoyed by perhaps only one person, or even zero. Our paper/balls salad might never be gazed upon by another living soul, but its origin makes it, by definition, Vietnamese food.
So, even though cannibalism, like the consumption of paper/balls salad, isn't widely practised in Vietnam in particular, if one were to consume the body of a Vietnamese person, wouldn't the reasoning I described above imply that such an action could be described as 'eating Vietnamese food'?
Join me in discussion, friends and colleagues.
If you were to eat a Vietnamese person, does that mean you ate Vietnamese food?
The nationality, of course, is irrelevant - it just happened to be the one in question during the conversation I was having when this thought occurred to me. So no offence to War.
But yeah. I'm talking about food in its broadest definition here. That is, anything with any nutritional value whatsoever. So, like, anything.
However, I think that what defines 'Vietnamese food' or food attributed to any nationality/culture is that it's prepared/reaches some state at which it has properties unique to that country/culture. Similarly, a Vietnamese person has some qualities, either biological or mental, that sets them apart from other nationalities.
So if some Vietnamese person (either native or simply raised to be whatever it is to be 'Vietnamese', which is another issue) decides to prepare some bizarre, never-done-before dish like a potato salad with shredded sandpaper and bull testicles mixed through it, that dish becomes Vietnamese food. Well, extremely unpopular Vietnamese food, enjoyed by perhaps only one person, or even zero. Our paper/balls salad might never be gazed upon by another living soul, but its origin makes it, by definition, Vietnamese food.
So, even though cannibalism, like the consumption of paper/balls salad, isn't widely practised in Vietnam in particular, if one were to consume the body of a Vietnamese person, wouldn't the reasoning I described above imply that such an action could be described as 'eating Vietnamese food'?
Join me in discussion, friends and colleagues.