France in the New Century: Portrait of a Changing Society
|
| Price: |
9 new or used available from £3.70
Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #391803 in Books
- Published on: 2000-05-25
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 768 pages
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.co.uk Review
John Ardagh established himself as an astute observer of France some 40 years ago and in his latest foray into all things French he reinforces his reputation. Whether he is dealing with the disillusionment of politics or the disappearance of the Parisian pissoir, his portrait of France brings us bang up-to-date. He has an enviable facility for marshalling a mass of facts and figures and fashioning them into an authoritative and highly readable narrative. The book's essence is to evoke a nation undergoing rapid change in which reform meets resistance and the transformation of traditional attitudes traumatic. Ardagh's reporting ranges from the paradoxes of the French "economic miracle" to the cultural conflicts fought our over the direction of its drama and music, cinema and television. He pictures the position of France in Europe and the world while at the same time short-focussing his lens to pinpoint particulars such as the battle of the little shopkeepers against the growth of the hypermarkets. Ardagh is a francophile but his love of the country does not prevent him from being frank about its failings. He finds himself less pessimistic than many of the French about the state of their country, and for anyone seriously interested in understanding what is happening in France today there can be no better starting point than Ardagh's analysis. --Michael Hatfield
Synopsis
Presenting a portrait of changes in French society since 1945, with the accent on the France of the mid-1990s, this book's main focus is on society, culture and the economy, but space is also given to politics.
Customer Reviews
An excellent Christmas read on France & the French
I cannot recommend this book highly enough: to anyone interested in France, particularly Modern France, or Europe generally -- and anyone curious about, or needing to know about, cultural changes forced on traditional societies by the "buzz" in modern life.
Ardagh writes in English -- mercifully, for the many who love the French but know their language imperfectly. Even to someone who knows French well, however, the book still offers a great deal of value: many insights, the product of the author's nearly 50 years of fascination with and experience of France -- he was correspondent for The Times in the 50s, for The Observer in the 60s, and has an extensive bibliography.
And Ardagh's is at least one of the best - informed "outsider's views" of France and the French, views particularly valuable to this often - beleaguered land and its introspective people. Plenty of French political and cultural leaders will read this book -- many of them who have mattered over the last 30 years in fact were interviewed in its preparation.
John Ardagh is, by now, a venerable institution to anyone outside the Hexagone who has been interested in France since the 1960s. To those of us whose personal interests in France first were awakened by -- who teethed on -- his, "The new French Revolution; a social & economic survey of France 1945-1967" (1968), the wait for this entirely new view -- not an update or revision but a new investigation, drawing only occasionally on his earlier work -- has been interminable. Works on modern France in French rarely are this general; works in English rarely are this good.
Ardagh also is irrepressible:
· "...that reminded me of the time when the Irishman Richard Harris was named Best Actor at Cannes and the London press rejoiced, 'British actor wins award'; when he got drunk a month later, the headlines ran 'Irish actor arrested in bar'. Typical." (p.241-2)
-- this sort of writing makes his text flow wonderfully, and the strong opinions and barrage of facts and statistics he offers to support them are a rare pleasure to read for a "modern anything" sort of book -- the book is fun.
Other morsels:
· "There were various strands in the May ['68] movement -- euphoric, revolutionary, materialist and reformist, to put them in ascending order of importance. First was the element of national carnival..." (p. 13)
· "The 'juges' are trained mostly at a Grande Ecole in Bordeaux, the Ecole Nationale de la Magistrature: they form a close little world, where 'ils se marient entre eux, et ils font des petits juges', I was told." (p. 47)
· "Back in the 1950s, [Renault's] little Dauphine at first appealed hugely to Americans: they had never seen a car so cute and they bought 200,000 in three years, often as playthings for wife or kids. But then the mighty VW invaded the scene, and Renault was eclipsed by a swarm of Beetles." (p. 123)
· "...labour regulations [in France] are of horrifying complexity, enshrined in a vast tome, the Code du Travail, which by a kind of Parkinsonism is constantly being added to by zealous bureaucrats, despite the intentions to simplify it: for one European Commission inquiry on labour, the British submitted a working paper of 6 pages, while the French document was 1,000 pages." (p. 181)
· "The United States may have far greater extremes of wealth and poverty than France. But it also has more social mobility, and thus more freedom of opportunity than France's older society where many class divisions today remain quite rigid, behind the shifts in lifestyle. This can be more a matter of attitudes than of economics..." (p. 188 -- the subsequent section, on the subtle and maddeningly - continuing differences between French and British "class" consciousness and divisions, will prove both fascinating and illuminating to American readers, and controversial to anyone French or British, as they perhaps are intended to be.)
And Ardagh pulls no punches:
· "Regional planning has of course suffered from the usual French chasm between theory and achievement. Splendid blueprints may fall foul of ministerial rivalries, bureaucratic inertia or sheer lack of funds. Ask any Frenchman what he has done, and excitedly he will tell you what he is about to do..." (p. 262)
-- but at least his sarcasm can be hilariously funny, in true Parisian style --
· "Many local executives and 'notables' seem mesmerized by geographical obsessions that sound weird to English ears. Towns are pieces on some huge chessboard, and the mere drawing of lines across a map yields some strange reality of its own. Translated into English terms, a local dignitary might talk like this:
* Swindon, bien que dans l'orbite londonienne, peut profiter d'une certaine vocation bristolienne, et tout en s'inspirant du rayonnement intellectuel oxfordien, elle se situe bien pour remplir un grand destin au carrefour des grands axes de demain -- de l'agglomération birminghamoise jusqu'à Southampton aux portes de l'Amérique, et de l'hinterland' ["in franglais", Ardagh observes] 'galloise jusqu'à Harwich, plaque tournante de l'avenir scandinavienne.*
Does the mayor of Swindon talk like that?" (p. 263)
Anyone already knowledgeable about France will find something of interest here; anyone lacking such knowledge and wanting a beginning should read it all; something for everyone.
And provocative: the subtitle of his "Conclusion" -- "la morosité, and beyond" -- at least, should get a few backs up in Paris.
Ardagh does warn in his Preface, "The book takes for granted all that is unique and lovable about French civilization. As the French say, 'qui aime bien, châtie bien.'"
I can think of no other more suitable gift for someone interested in France and the French -- an ideal Christmas vacation project.
A really excellent and new overview of all things French...
I cannot recommend this book highly enough: to anyone interested in France, particularly Modern France, or Europe generally -- and anyone curious about, or needing to know about, cultural changes forced on traditional societies by the "buzz" in modern life.
Ardagh writes in English -- mercifully, for the many who love the French but know their language imperfectly. Even to someone who knows French well, however, the book still offers a great deal of value: many insights, the product of the author's nearly 50 years of fascination with and experience of France -- he was correspondent for The Times in the 50s, for The Observer in the 60s, and has an extensive bibliography.
And Ardagh's is at least one of the best - informed "outsider's views" of France and the French, views particularly valuable to this often - beleaguered land and its introspective people. Plenty of French political and cultural leaders will read this book -- many of them who have mattered over the last 30 years in fact were interviewed in its preparation.
John Ardagh is, by now, a venerable institution to anyone outside the Hexagone who has been interested in France since the 1960s. To those of us whose personal interests in France first were awakened by -- who teethed on -- his,
"The new French Revolution; a social & economic survey of France 1945-1967" (London, Secker & Warburg, 1968) ISBN 0436017504
the wait for this entirely new view -- not an update or revision but a new investigation, drawing only occasionally on his earlier work -- has been interminable. Works on modern France in French rarely are this general; works in English on the subject rarely are this good.
Ardagh also is irrepressible:
"...that reminded me of the time when the Irishman Richard Harris was named Best Actor at Cannes and the London press rejoiced, 'British actor wins award'; when he got drunk a month later, the headlines ran 'Irish actor arrested in bar'. Typical." (p.241-2)
-- this sort of writing makes his text flow wonderfully, and the strong opinions and barrage of facts and statistics he offers to support them are a rare pleasure to read for a "modern anything" sort of book -- the book is fun.
Other morsels:
"There were various strands in the May ['68] movement -- euphoric, revolutionary, materialist and reformist, to put them in ascending order of importance. First was the element of national carnival..." (p. 13)
"The 'juges' are trained mostly at a Grande Ecole in Bordeaux, the Ecole Nationale de la Magistrature: they form a close little world, where 'ils se marient entre eux, et ils font des petits juges', I was told." (p. 47)
"Back in the 1950s, [Renault's] little Dauphine at first appealed hugely to Americans: they had never seen a car so cute and they bought 200,000 in three years, often as playthings for wife or kids. But then the mighty VW invaded the scene, and Renault was eclipsed by a swarm of Beetles." (p. 123)
"...labour regulations [in France] are of horrifying complexity, enshrined in a vast tome, the Code du Travail, which by a kind of Parkinsonism is constantly being added to by zealous bureaucrats, despite the intentions to simplify it: for one European Commission inquiry on labour, the British submitted a working paper of 6 pages, while the French document was 1,000 pages." (p. 181)
"The United States may have far greater extremes of wealth and poverty than France. But it also has more social mobility, and thus more freedom of opportunity than France's older society where many class divisions today remain quite rigid, behind the shifts in lifestyle. This can be more a matter of attitudes than of economics..." (p. 188 -- the subsequent section, on the subtle and maddeningly - continuing differences between French and British "class" consciousness and divisions, will prove both fascinating and illuminating to American readers, and controversial to anyone French or British, as they perhaps are intended to be.)
And Ardagh pulls no punches:
"Regional planning has of course suffered from the usual French chasm between theory and achievement. Splendid blueprints may fall foul of ministerial rivalries, bureaucratic inertia or sheer lack of funds. Ask any Frenchman what he has done, and excitedly he will tell you what he is about to do..." (p. 262)
-- but at least his sarcasm can be hilariously funny, in true Parisian style --
"Many local executives and 'notables' seem mesmerized by geographical obsessions that sound weird to English ears. Towns are pieces on some huge chessboard, and the mere drawing of lines across a map yields some strange reality of its own. Translated into English terms, a local dignitary might talk like this:
'Swindon, bien que dans l'orbite londonienne, peut profiter d'une certaine vocation bristolienne, et tout en s'inspirant du rayonnement intellectuel oxfordien, elle se situe bien pour remplir un grand destin au carrefour des grands axes de demain -- de l'agglomération birminghamoise jusqu'à Southampton aux portes de l'Amérique, et de l'hinterland' ["in franglais", Ardagh observes] 'galloise jusqu'à Harwich, plaque tournante de l'avenir scandinavienne...'
Does the mayor of Swindon talk like that?" (p. 263)
-- irrepressible, like I said. And provocative: the "La Morosité amd beyond" subtitle of his "Conclusion", at least, should get a few backs up in Paris -- although, as Ardagh does warn in his Preface, "The book takes for granted all that is unique and lovable about French civilization. As the French say, 'qui aime bien, châtie bien.'"
I can think of no other more suitable gift for someone interested in France and the French -- an ideal Christmas vacation project.





