As I read
“Good Cooking,” the constant thought going through my mind was “Yes! This is the kind of person I want to
be!” I felt this way because of Julia
Child’s modesty, her honesty, and her humor.
But for me, the main aspect of Julia Child’s character that made her as
appealing as the meals that she cooked was the humbling way she realized her
passions.
The way in
which Julia Child followed her passion of cooking is extremely refreshing to
me. There have been many times where I
have felt extremely intimidated by people who have known what their passions
were since they were 5 years old. Julia
sort of fell into cooking while living in France and that is when she realized
it was what she loved to do. I kept
rereading the line: “Until I got into cooking…I was never really interested in anything,” (Tomkins 131). It is like she has this epiphany and all of
a sudden her life was changed. She
didn’t pretend to know what she wanted in life since she was born, she just
followed the road life was leading her on and once she landed on cooking, that
is when she knew what she needed to do.
Along the
same vein, I loved the way this story portrayed Julia as such an endearing
human being. I think oftentimes when we
are intrigued by art, we look at it as an isolated entity brought into the
world of its own fruition, not as an entity attached to its creator. Whether visual, theatrical, whatever art form
it may be, I believe a work of art in some way reflects its creator. People did not buy Mastering the Art of French Cooking only due to its exquisite
recipes but because they loved the person behind those recipes. When she dropped the dish she had spent so
long making in front of an entire audience, it did not make them view Julia as
less of a chef, it made her seem like an actual human being instead of this
idol we often view artists as. By
following her example I believe we can make art more meaningful. Being able to convey such a sentiment and
inspire me as a reader in such a short reading reflects how genius both Julia
Child and the author, Calvin Tomkins, are.
What I
gathered from this reading is that Julia Child was not just a chef. She was an entertainer. She was a visionary. She was a teacher. She was a human being. She is not iconic because she cooked to
perfection; she is iconic because of her imperfections. We admire her because we are in awe of her
self-assurance. I may not want to pursue
a career as a chef, but whatever I choose to be I hope to follow in her
footsteps, bringing my humanness and personality to what it is I create.
Hi Emma,
ReplyDeleteIt's so cool you enjoyed the Julia Child story. Your take on her humanness opened up the story for me, for I felt the narrator was rather distant. The comparison to art was rather striking as well. I think you got a lot out of this story!