Putting the individual on the menu: The invention of the restaurant in eighteenth‑century Paris

By Rebecca L. Spang, Sylvie Muller
English

Restaurants are often assumed to satisfy a simple biological need and therefore to be a constant throughout history. Many of the specific features we expect from a restaurant, however—individualized tables, customers who select from a menu, meals served at a variety of times—are not timeless universals. They are instead highly specific historical developments, linked to the emergence of modern ideas of individualism and facilitated by the commercialized medical sensibility central to eighteenth‑century elite culture.

Keywords

  • restaurant
  • history
  • individualism
  • menu
  • choice
  • restaurant
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