Food Obsession going over the board in US?

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In recent months, it seems as if the foodie choir has reached a fever pitch. Beyond the fact that your mom’s manicurist probably has a food blog, there’s also been plenty of comparisons of food as the new fashion, or food as the new rock. Back in 2006, David Camp published the book “The United States Of Arugula,” which poked fun at the increased focus on high-end food as a lifestyle — shopping at Whole Foods, buying only free-range chickens, etc. Kamp may have predicted a bleak future for the anti-foodie, but he was maybe even a bit ahead of his time. “Comfort Me With Offal,” a new book by Twitter mash-up persona Ruth Bourdain, takes food obsessiveness to an even more ridiculous height. It pokes fun of everything from celebrity chef fandom to excessive locavore-ness. In addition to books, there have been several recent articles that discuss the overexposure of all this food rhapsodizing. In March, New York magazine published a piece about foodie-ism as youth culture. The article, aptly titled “When Did Young People Start Spending 25% of Their Paychecks on Pickled Lamb’s Tongues?” focused on an uber-foodie who obsessed over restaurants both on- and off-the-beaten path. Her tunnel vision toward food felt exhausting to read. William Deresiewicz argues, food has not led to a taste for art but has instead replaced it. He offers several examples and then ends with this worrisome line: Yes, food centers life in France and Italy, too, but not to the disadvantage of art, which still occupies the supreme place in both cultures.