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Encyclopedia :
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JE :
JEA :
Jean Anthelme Brillat-Savarin |
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Jean Anthelme Brillat-Savarin
During the French Revolution, there was a bounty on his head and he sought political asylum through exile, at first in Switzerland. He later moved to Holland, and then to the newly-born United States, where he stayed for three years in Boston, New York, Philadelphia and Hartford, living on the proceeds of giving French and violin lessons. For a time he was first violin in the Park Theater in New York. He returned to France under the Directorate in 1797 and acquired the magistrate post he would then hold for the rest of his life, as a judge of the court of cassation. He published several works on law and political economy. He remained a bachelor, but not a stranger to love, which he counted the sixth sense. His famous work, Physiologie du goût (The Physiology of Taste), was published in December 1825, two months before his death. The full title is The body of his work, though often wordy or excessively - and sometimes dubiously - aphoristic and axiomatic, has remained extremely important and has been re-analyzed throughout the years since his death. In a series of Meditations that owe something to Montaigne's Essays, and have the discursive rhythm of an age of leisured reading and a confident pursuit of educated pleasures, which combine to put Brillat-Savarin outside the teach of the hectic and impatient modern reader, Brillat-Savarin discourses on the pleasures of the table, which he treats as a science. His French models were the stylists of the ancien régime: Voltaire, Rousseau Fenelon, Buffon, Cochin and d'Aguesseau were his favorite authors. Aside from Latin, he knew five modern languages well, and wasn't shy to parade them, when the occasion suited. As a modernist, he never hesitated to borrow a word, like the English sip when French seemed to him to fail. The genuine philosophy of Epicurus lies at the back of every page; the simplest meal satisfied Brillat-Savarin, as long as it was executed with artistry. : He compared after-taste, the perfume or fragrance of food, to musical enharmonics (Med. ii): "but for the odor which is felt in the back of the mouth, the sensation of taste would be but obtuse and imperfect." To a modern reader, the anecdotes give more pleasure. One enjoys Brillat-Savarin's tale of a turkey-shoot in Connecticut in 1797 (Meditation vi), more than his scientific explanation of why people who eat fish live longer:
Brillat-Savarin cheese is named in his honor.
Anthelme Brillat-Savarin (April 1, 1755, Belley, France - February 2, 1826, Paris) was a French lawyer and politician.
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