Wu Ting
How would you interpret the last sentence? Artie proposed breakfast at the Swiss Kitchen, one of his haunts. It seemed to be a tourist place, they had a giant sign out front with a boy in lederhosen (Food Worth Yodeling About!) and waitresses dressed as milkmaids. Artie, in his ancient cuffed trousers and faint old-man smell, was unembarrassed by any of it. “What makes it Swiss food?” I asked, studying the menu. “A lot of grease. Bratwurst, only here they are going to call it sausage. German food with a strict doctrine of neutrality.” How would you interpret the last sentence: German food with a strict doctrine of neutrality? Thanks! And this excerpt is taken from The Lacuna by Kingsolver.
28 апр. 2015 г., 2:03
Ответы · 4
1
I think it's a joke referring to the war. They're not using the German word 'Bratwurst' because of lingering bad feelings against Germany. Instead they're using a more neutral word.
28 апреля 2015 г.
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