The Economist - UK (2022-04-30)

(Antfer) #1
The Economist April 30th 2022 Culture 75

Lula’s  Workers’  Party,  whenanoilboom
offered bounteous revenues andpartyoffi­
cials centralised corruption. 
There is much truth in this.Systematic
corruption  has  contributedto anexpen­
sive  state  in  Brazil  that  offerspoorpublic
services.  Lava  Jato  turned  upcasesofgro­
tesque  greed.  Sérgio  Cabral,a formergo­
vernor  of  Rio  de  Janeiro  nowinprison,
pocketed  around  $100m,  levying 5%on
construction  contracts  and embezzling
budgets from health care to prisonmeals.
Yet the authors push theirthesistoofar.
They never discuss in detailhowmuchof
the bribery involved personalenrichment
and  how  much  campaign  finance. They
attribute  adverse  judicial  decisions and
budget cuts to conspiracy. Brazil’sSupreme
Court  has  shown  greater  independence
than they give it credit for. Buttheirpleas
for the independence of the FederalPolice,
and  for  more  resources  for  theforce,are
well  made.  They  are  particularlyscathing
about  the  distorted  prioritiesimposedby
the war on drugs: tens of thousandsofpoor
Brazilians  have  been  lockedupwhilethe
crimes of the rich and powerfulhaveoften
gone unpunished. 
Some Brazilians believedthatMrMoro
was  simply  out  to  get  Lula.  Therewasno
evidence  the  former  presidenthadoccu­
pied  the  penthouse  (there wasstronger
proof  in  another  case  involvinga country
retreat).  Lula’s  conviction,  upheldonap­
peal,  prevented  him  from  runninginan
election in 2018 and paved thewayforJair
Bolsonaro,  a  right­wing  populist,towin
the  presidency.  Suspicion  of Mr Moro’s
motives was aroused when hereleasedda­
maging  plea­bargaining  testimonyimpli­
cating  Lula  days  before  thevote. Itwas
reinforced  when  the  judge  agreedto be­
come Mr Bolsonaro’s justice minister.
Since  2019  the  tables have turned
against Lava Jato. Leaked messagesshowed
that Mr Moro broke the rules ofjudicialim­
partiality  by  coaching  Mr  Dallagnol.Bya
narrow  majority  the  SupremeCourt re­
versed  its  previous  ruling  thattheguilty
should  be  imprisoned  aftera firstappeal
and  thus  freed  Lula.  The  courtalsoruled
that Mr Moro had exceeded hisjurisdiction
in pursuing the former presidentformat­
ters not directly related to Petrobras.
Although  he  campaignedagainstcor­
ruption, Mr Bolsonaro has shownlittlein­
terest in fighting it. He appointeda public
prosecutor  and  a  federal  policechiefwho
do  his  bidding.  The  pandemicandeco­
nomic troubles have displacedcorruption
in the public mind. Many of thosejailedfor
Lava Jato are agitating for theirrelease.
One  lasting  benefit  of  thescandalisa
reform  that  bars  corporate  politicaldona­
tions.  In  other  respects, the struggle
against  institutionalised  crime has not
yielded the fruits that Mr Pontes,MrAnsel­
mo and many others hoped for.n


Worldina dish

The buttered pragmatist


J


uliachilddiedalmost 18 yearsago,at
the enviable age of 91, having done more
to enrich American culinary life than any­
one before or since. She wrote many books,
including her two­volume landmark “Mas­
tering the Art of French Cooking”; present­
ed numerous television series; and won a
cabinet full of awards, including the Presi­
dential Medal of Freedom. Her life in food
was public—so is her private life, thanks to
several biographies and films. There seems
to be little left to say about her.
And  yet  hbo Max  and  Sky  Atlantic  are
airing a new series, “Julia”, dramatising the
start of her tv career. On the Food Network,
contestants on “The Julia Child Challenge”
make  Child’s  recipes  in  a  replica  of  her
kitchen. And Helen Lefkowitz Horowitz, a
historian  at  Smith  College,  recently  pub­
lished “Warming Up Julia Child”, about the
friends  and  colleagues  who  nurtured  her
career. Why the sudden burst of interest?
One answer is that contemporary popu­
lar  culture  loves  familiar  successes—wit­
ness  the  current  fad  for  remakes,  reboots
and  the  ever­expanding  superhero  “uni­
verses”.  Child  was  wildly  popular,  with  a
literary and television career spanning the
20th  century’s  last  four  decades.  Studios
and  publishers  imagine  that  she  has  le­
gions  of  fans  who  will  eagerly  watch  and
read anything about her.
But that is too cynical by half. The real
answer is that Child lived a bold and event­
ful  life,  capacious  enough  to  offer  nostal­
gia to those who remember her and inspi­
ration  to  those  who  do  not.  In  effect,  she
was  a  populariser  of  French  cuisine—but

thatcarries the implication that she some­
how  diluted  it  for  the  masses.  In  fact,  her
recipes  are  not  simple  or  dumbed  down:
they are clear. 
At  heart  she  was  a  demystifier  and  a
pragmatist. She ensured that all her recipes
could be recreated in the average mid­cen­
tury  American  home  kitchen.  She  took
food  seriously,  but  unlike  generations  of
men in white toques who cultivated impe­
rious, remote demeanours, she had no pa­
tience  for  cant  or  pomp.  Cooking  French
food  does  not  require  that  the  chef  be
touched  by  God,  or  begin  an  apprentice­
ship  in  childhood;  it  merely  requires  that
they  follow  a  series  of  easily  explicable
steps.  In  a  letter  to  a  friend  written  while
she was living in Paris, before she was fam­
ous,  she  referred  to  France’s  most  es­
teemed  food  writer  as  “a  dogmatic  meat­
ball”. His insistence on rigid culinary rules
was “so damned typical, making a damned
mystery out of perfectly simple things”.
That  line  is  quintessential  Child:
straightforward,  funny  and  confident  in
the  best  sense.  To  earlier  generations,  she
was an emissary from the refined world of
French  gastronomy.  Today’s  viewers  may
see  her,  rightly,  as  a  feminist  icon  who
broke into the then­overwhelmingly male
worlds of haute cuisine and television de­
spite having no professional experience in
either,  on  the  strength  of  unfussy  charm,
wit  and  hard  work  (producing  “Mastering
the Art of French Cooking” took years, part­
ly  because  she  rigorously  testedandre­
fined the recipes to ensure they werefool­
proof ). Those qualities are timeless.n

What’s behind a revival of interest in Julia Child?
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