Sunday links

Hello from Kintyre, where I have been busily planting bulbs and working on samples for our new collection. While I knit, I like to listen to podcasts, books, and journalism and really appreciate the audio availability of formerly text-exclusive media. Here are a few of the things I’ve enjoyed listening to and thinking about over the past few days.

Drowning in slop

First, in the week when Meta announced it was going to begin filling its users’ IG and Facebook feeds with synthetic material that has been automatically generated from their own likenesses and likes, I enjoyed two intelligent pieces about the giddy digital doom-loop of AI slop, which in so many ways defines our present moment. If you don’t know what I’m talking about, Max Read’s essay offers a great introduction to, and analysis of, the internet’s current slop problem (also available via NYT audio, which is how I came across it). On the BBC’s Artificial Human, meanwhile, Aleks Krotoski and Kevin Fong have a different take on the question Will Shrimp Jesus Kill Social Media?, which takes them on a journey from Instagram’s fake sweaters (we all know about those) to AI’s impact on the communities of the Global South.

Can you taste a place?

As someone living in a part of Scotland, where “terroir” is a particularly important component of local whisky production, I find myself thinking about what it means to “taste” a place a lot. On a recent episode of The Food Chain on the BBC World Service, Ruth Alexander does a brilliant job of interrogating – and challenging – the very idea of terroir (what might it mean to “taste the place” of a vertically-grown lettuce from a hydroponic warehouse in Liverpool?) whilst simultaneously acknowledging the unshakable connection of terroir to our sense of who, and where, we are (I really enjoyed her account of her own sense of the differences between British and Swedish potatoes).

Why do we find the idea that you can taste a place so very persuasive? What kinds of cultural value are being added to the things that we eat and drink through knowledge of the practices and places of its production? A few months ago I offered a jar of my favourite jam to a no-frills friend who, when I earnestly explained the fruit types and regional agricultural practices that made it so very special, laughed at me for my bourgeois pretension. Such moments – in which we are able to recognise terroir as an idea that might be both fatuous (my description of the jam was undoubtedly pretentious) and tangible (this jam IS very good, because of how and from what it is made) – remind us of the curious power of this notoriously fuzzy concept. In Lily Kelting’s fine essay for Emergence Magazine, she takes the process of terroir interrogation several steps further, exploring the distinctive taste of the milk of India’s urban cows.

Holy Terroir

This thought-provoking and thoughtful piece offers an important challenge to Western notions of terroir, while simultaneously re-claiming the taste of India’s marginal urban spaces as distinctive (and delicious). Highly recommended (and many thanks to Felix for mentioning it to me)

The wonder of Stevie

Finally, as a Stevie Wonder superfan, I have to say how much I loved Wesley Morris’ terrific podcast series, The Wonder of Stevie. This is an unalloyed and completely joyful celebration of the great albums of the 1970s, whose many wee gems include audio excerpts from a Terry Wogan interview with Stevie and his mother; a great discussion of the significance of the cover of Talking Book; Barack Obama’s description of his feelings about Living for the City, and Morris’ own emotional account of his eventual recognition of the cosmic significance of As.

Enjoy your Sunday!


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Comments

6 responses to “Sunday links”

  1. Erika Otter Avatar
    Erika Otter

    Now THESE are some weekend links! Thank you so much for your research and effort to share with us. Feels like it’s from the old days of blogs when people’s entries were so rich with things to be discovered. I love Wesley Morris and am looking forward to the podcast.

  2. Thank you so much for including Holy Terroir – I adored this piece for disturbing the idea that TERROIR relates only to produce grown in The Global North, for middle and upper-class consumers. I found it a generous and expansive audio essay speaking to the ingenuity, resourcefulness and distinctiveness of the dairies and milk of Pune. I love how Lily situates this food culture in the contexts of colonialism, pollution and urbanity – urgently reminding us that these components are an integral part of “place” – and of eating and drinking. There was a sort of material, celebratory joy in this work and I loved how it comes at issues of waste, pollution and urbanisation with curiosity and wonder – and is not afraid to disrupt entrenched Western ideals re: “good taste”.

    I also loved the links you shared about about AI slop – thanks so much for mentioning them. They are really helpful for making sense of what the Internet is becoming, how it’s changing, and the depressing desires that are the motivation. I thought there was a particularly interesting connection between “Will Shrimp Jesus Kill Social Media” and “Holy Terroir” in that both of these pieces pointed to ingenuity, invention and creativity in the Indian subcontinent and, in different ways, with how we, in the Global North, are implicated in creating the circumstances that have made it necessary to feed cows on rubbish and populate the Internet with AI-generated slop.

  3. sharonpearse Avatar
    sharonpearse

    Thanks very much for all the amazing links, Kate. As someone who’s had a reduced sense of smell & taste since I was carrying our daughter (38 this month!) I probably wouldn’t be able to taste many of the much vaunted differences attributed to Terrois. Though I certainly appreciate good food, well (organically & ethically) grown.

    However as a gardener I know there’s a LOT to be said about ‘Right plant, right place’. You might be able to grow Meconopsis in your garden. I certainly couldn’t on the chalk-based soils of south Hampshire, however much I might like to, or however damp it might be at the moment.

    I wonder how much of the ‘distinctive taste of the milk of India’s urban cows’ is due to the rubbish they often eat, and what else might be in their milk – given ‘urban’. Rubber particulates from tyres, carbon particles from diesel engines, not to mention various pollutants from all over because India has less restrictive anti-pollution laws (mercury, etc, anyone?) Having written which – look at the mess the Water Companies have made of our rivers and inshore seas!

    >

  4. Your comments about terroir reminded me of living in a west Yorkshire village in the 1970’s. Milk was delivered by local farmers, who all bottled their own milk. There was intense competition for customers from several small local farms. Everyone had their favourite supplier. (often due to family ties) People often claimed that they could tell the difference between the milk from different farms

  5. bethanybrooke1 Avatar
    bethanybrooke1

    Kate, you keep me current! I don’t generally follow blogs; only yours and

    Amy Ries’ of Raptor Resource Project in Decorah, Iowa. So I really appreciate your discussions on topics like “terroir”- a word/concept I’ve never heard before- and “AI slop” – a situation we are all too familiar with. Thanks for the reading suggestions!

  6. lindyb13 Avatar

    Kate, Wow!! Steeped in culture at 6:30 on a Sunday morning. I love it and can hardly wait to listen to some of the many audio offerings you gifted us with.

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