Food and Warfare

Here is an amusing/horrifying animation of the history of human conflicts (WWII to the present day), which uses the foods typically associated with the various countries involved to act out the conflicts. It’s called “Food Fight.”


Japan is pieces of sushi, the Arabs are represented by kebab and falafel, the Israelis are bagels and lox, the U.S. is hamburgers and chicken McNuggets, Russia is beef stroganoff, the Vietnamese are those yummy rice noodle wrapped spring rolls.

On one hand, to watch food stereotypes blowing each other up is pretty funny, as is trying to figure out which foods represent which countries. My favorite part is the representation of the Cold War where the hamburger and the beef stroganoff face off, the hamburger keeps adding more and more beef patties, the pile of beef stroganoff gets bigger and bigger, and then they resolve the conflict by just leaving.

However, because it’s a food fight, the mess left behind after they blow each other up can be disturbingly carnage-like, which this gives the whole thing a pretty somber undertone. I found the representation of when the U.S. dropped the atomic bombs on Japan disconcerting: those pieces of sushi were completely charred. And you can’t help but consider the real human beings that were charred after those incidents. The depictions of suicide bombings were also a bit hard to watch since we hear about them every day. The 5½ minute animation also highlights the fact that there has been a war occurring somewhere in the world pretty much continuously since WWII.

The use of food stereotypes highlights the absurdity of warfare while at the same time maintaining a focus on the seriousness of these situations. The foods make these events seem ridiculous, but only up to a point. Because these are real events that have been repeated again and again.

Comments

Very interesting!

I took me until the arms race/cold war segment to figure out that the blob of noodles was beef stroganoff/Russia, and I certainly have to take a bit of issue with the kind of lazy stereotyping of "ethnic" foods (many of which appeared to be Americanized versions of said foods), but the video as a whole is pretty amazing. Poignant, even.

Yes, I think that this is

Yes, I think that this is clearly an American's view of what foods represent what countries. I don't know how many Chinese would agree that egg rolls and potstickers are an accurate representation of their cuisine.

The ethnic food angle is

The ethnic food angle is really problematic as the video advances. We have a decent kind of distinction between European nations, but the entire Middle East is all the same. Maybe this is why McCain (and most of America) can't distinguish between the various kinds of extremists in the Middle East. If you've seen one kabob(?) you've seen them all.

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