Additionally, the show’s treatment of class, while often incisive, occasionally romanticized poverty. Bourdain’s celebration of "simple" peasant food risked, at times, aestheticizing economic hardship, though he generally avoided this by foregrounding the intelligence and craftsmanship of working-class cooks.
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One of the show’s most significant scholarly contributions is its explicit engagement with the political economy of food. Bourdain refused to separate the meal from the geopolitical context. An episode on Vietnamese food did not ignore the Vietnam War; instead, Bourdain ate with a former Viet Cong soldier, discussing the legacy of conflict over a bowl of bún chả . Similarly, an episode in the West Bank directly confronted the Israeli occupation, not through polemic, but by showing how checkpoints and separation walls disrupt the agricultural and culinary supply chains of Palestinian communities. Additionally, the show’s treatment of class, while often