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America has Captured France
Unherd ^ | April 13, 2022 | Krzysztof Tyszka-Drozdowski

Posted on 04/15/2022 8:01:43 AM PDT by untenured

France is no longer the country of Notre-Dame, nor the country of De Gaulle, where the Concorde was built and a broad middle-class prospered. To understand this moment of profound transition, you have to look past the results of last weekend’s Presidential election first round, and beyond the forthcoming run-off between Emmanuel Macron and Marine Le Pen. Election campaigns can only tell us so much.

What is happening to France, as sociologist Jerôme Fourquet observed, is best understood as “the Great Metamorphosis”. Nobody has done more than Fourquet to peel away the misapprehensions that surround French society, and reveal what it is now, or what it will look like in the future. He is the sociologist of France as it is, not what it once was, or how The Economist or Financial Times wishes it to be.

“The Great Metamorphosis” began, Fourquet argues in La France sous nos yeux (2021), in the Eighties. That was the decade France’s cultural core began to collapse in on itself, and the features of French society in its present form began to surface.

In 1983 strikes and violent protests by auto-workers, mostly immigrants from the Maghreb, made the Muslim minority visible to France for the first time. Images of the riots propelled the Front National to its first significant successes in the European elections of 1984. France’s agonies over migration had begun.

Then, in 2005, French voters rejected the European Constitution in a referendum — despite its backing by most of the French media and political class. Here, Fourquet believes, a new divide could be seen for the first time, one that would determine political conflict going forward: between those who benefited from globalisation, and those who did not.

Against this backdrop of intensifying political discontent, French culture was changing. Older mores were disappearing, especially Christian ones, and Catholic ones in particular. Fourquet strikingly demonstrates the disappearance of the Church’s influence on French sensibilities. In 1961, 38% of French Catholics declared that they went to Mass every Sunday. By 2012, only 7% did. This sharp decline in the number of practising Catholics was matched by a shrinking number of vocations. At the outbreak of the Revolution, the number of priests, 170,000, was almost equal to their number in 1950. By 2015, it had fallen to 51,500. If the current trend continues there won’t be a single Catholic priest left in France in 30 years.

Released from this crumbling framework, French attitudes towards marriage, homosexuality, and children born to unmarried parents changed dramatically. In the Sixties, marriage was still the dominant social norm, but today it has ceased to be so. In 1980, 11.4% of children were born out of wedlock; by 1990 it was 30% and by 2005, more than half the children were born outside of marriage. If a teacher had started his career in 1980, he would have taught a class in which almost all the children had married parents. By the time of his retirement, however, that ratio would have inverted.

The last stand of French Catholicism came when Francois Hollande legalised gay marriage in 2013. To an extent unseen in the United Kingdom, or Germany, or Spain, French Catholics mobilised against Hollande’s decision. La Manif pour tous marches drew tens of thousands of participants who disagreed with the new law, but to no avail. Catholics finally realised they were a minority, one of the islands in the “French archipelago”, as the title of one of Fourquet’s books goes. Dechristianisation, he believed, had entered its “terminal stage”.

Nature famously abhors a vacuum. As Christianity receded other forces began to influence French society. Emancipation from tradition led to individualism. Fourquet measures this in birth names: In the early Sixties, the number of newborns with rare names — those that had been given to no more than three people so far — was less than 6,000. By 1990, it had jumped to nearly 18,000. But the real explosion came in 2016, when as many as 55,000 newborns bore rare names. And the cultural component of Catholicism was replaced by American pop culture.

Americanisation, Fourquet writes, has profoundly transformed France. Although 27% of French people have visited the US at least once, every second person among the wealthy has done so. The upper classes are fluent in English — Macron voters were the most proficient in this language, while Le Pen voters were the least — and consume mostly American media.

The less fortunate have their own cultural markers of Americanisation. Again, Fourquet analyses names. The Maries of French tradition were replaced by Kevins (after Home Alone) and Dylans (after Beverly Hills 90210). The map of these American names coincides with the places where Marine Le Pen can count on her firmest support. Many National Rally activists bear names such as Jordan Bardella, today the number two in the party, or Davy Rodriguez, who headed its youth organisation. More phenomena of this kitschy low-status Americanisation include the immense popularity of country music clubs, vintage US cars, and pole dancing across France, as well the spread of the Buffalo Grill restaurant chain in hundreds of locations.

Both the elites and the working classes began to dream American dreams. Fourquet calls one of them the “Plaza majority” lifestyle, after the name of the celebrity real estate agent Stéphane Plaza. In his TV shows, he advertises an ideal shared across French society: a house with a garden, a desire that mimics the American suburban lifestyle. Depending on the class, this ideal assumes different forms, but it often includes a swimming pool. This vision of affluence from America captured the imagination of the French, who have built 1.3 million pools in their country. Elsewhere, Fourquet says the last common experience of the “French archipelago” is a visit, or “pilgrimage” to Disneyland — 75% of those under 35 have visited the theme park.

Americanisation was the only component of globalisation that did not bitterly divide the French. According to Fourquet the split between those for whom globalisation meant achievement and those for whom it meant dispossession, would, from 2017, become central to understanding France. As in the United States and Britain, globalisation swept the French economy. As in the United States and Britain, its impact could have perverse consequences.

At the turn of the century, the French telecommunications manufacturer Alcatel had 120 different types of plants scattered around the country. One of them was located in Lannion. This is where Minitel was created and where the first French portable phone, Bi-bop, was invented. In 2001 Alcatel’s CEO declared that in the new economy factories were not necessary. Thousands of Lannion residents lost their jobs. Between 1999 and 2004 the city lost 10% of its population — then between 2004 and 2017 it fell by another 20%.

What happened to Lannion residents? They dropped out of the middle class, which was everywhere being reshaped by “the Great Metamorphosis”. It led to a phenomenon that Fourquet calls “bipolarisation”; society begins to resemble an hourglass. The middle class disintegrates, its lower strata falling into the lower classes and its upper strata ascending into the upper classes.

This process can be seen in leisure activities. The Trente Glorieuses were a time of upward social mobility, which translated into democratisation of ski slopes. While it used to be that entire middle class families went skiing, today skiing has become an activity that only the well-off can afford. The appearance of hard discount stores represents another sign of the erosion of the middle class. Its less affluent members cannot afford to maintain their consumption habits. This also, as Fourquet points out, explains the ominous success of Dacia cars. This Romanian brand, bought out by Renault, was originally intended as a way to expand into Eastern European markets. However, Dacia has enjoyed great popularity in France, allowing those who otherwise would have to turn to a used car to buy a new one.

Dacia drivers in the new France were more likely to work in warehouses, schools, and nursing homes than factories. It was these workers who became the backbone of the Gilets Jaunes movement. The protestors were the people who Fourquet had studied for decades; “the proletariat working in logistics and services”, and those who juggled several jobs to make ends meet. Jacline Mouraud, a Gilets Jaunes in the protest delegation which met with the French government, simultaneously worked as a hypnotherapist, an accordionist, and a security guard. Fourquet sees the Gilets Jaunes as an example of the “subaltern class” once described by Gramsci. Similar to the farmers of the Italian Mezzogiorno, constantly agitated, but unable to articulate their grievances successfully.

In Fourquet’s work we can see the patterns that have come to define modern France. The detachment of the elites from their country; the splintering of the middle-class; the collapse of centuries old traditions. His analyses clarify French politics. A Fourquet reader might have predicted Eric Zemmour’s failure to pick up the Rassemblement National vote over the weekend. The electorate of Kevins who sing country music and enjoy Buffalo Grill belongs to a different universe than the de Maistre-quoting essayist from Paris who recorded his best results in Saint-Tropez.

Without Fourquet’s writings, it can be difficult to grasp that the run-off between Macron and Le Pen is more than a political battle. It is a clash between two worlds within France, between the two halves of Fourquet’s hourglass. A confrontation, as Disraeli once wrote of a divided England, of “two nations, between whom there is no intercourse and no sympathy; who are as ignorant of each other’s habits, thoughts, and feelings, as if they were dwellers in different zones, or inhabitants of different planets.”

What will France be after France? Fourquet warned that the islands of the French archipelago will continue to drift apart. Stark differences in consumption, lifestyles, mobility, and wealth would only sharpen. He believed there were two ways to end this fragmentation. A new electoral system, based on proportional representation. And a final abandonment of France’s old Left-Right divide, and the acceptance of a new politics, contested on one side by the winners of globalisation, with the losers on the other side.

Proportional representation seems a distant prospect. But on Sunday, France, where politics had been structured for over half a century around two parties, changed dramatically. The socialists were irrelevant by 2017. Now Les Républicains cannot even obtain 5% of the vote. In the run-off, for the second time in a row, we will witness a showdown between the candidate of France for whom the future and globalisation mean the same thing and the candidate of France for whom globalisation means decline. French politics has finally come to represent the society described by Fourquet.


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Freepers can decide for themselves the extent to which political trends in France resemble those in the US.
1 posted on 04/15/2022 8:01:43 AM PDT by untenured
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To: untenured

France has always been a good friend to the US. It’s always right there when it needs us.


2 posted on 04/15/2022 8:04:01 AM PDT by wny ( )
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To: wny

LOL!...................Sacre Bleu!...................


3 posted on 04/15/2022 8:05:40 AM PDT by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegal aliens are put up in hotels.....................)
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To: untenured

When they say “Americanization” they are referring to the decadent, depraved, hedonistic, left wing Americans, i.e. those members of the scum-of-the-earth democratic party.


4 posted on 04/15/2022 8:08:54 AM PDT by Flavious_Maximus (Fauci is a murderer)
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To: untenured
I dunno.

For starters, it's not like rioting in France began in the 1980's. The Réveillon Riots about runaway inflation was before even Brandon was born (1780's).

And, well, let's be honest about Catholicism's decline in France. Yes, the white folk French are probably becoming more secular, but the mass invading rapefugees are more muslim than a Hillary culture advisor.

5 posted on 04/15/2022 8:10:00 AM PDT by Tell It Right (1st Thessalonians 5:21 -- Put everything to the test, hold fast to that which is true.)
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To: untenured

Bookmark


6 posted on 04/15/2022 8:14:04 AM PDT by Southside_Chicago_Republican (The more I learn about people, the more I like my dog. )
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manger du fromage singes d’abandon


7 posted on 04/15/2022 8:16:57 AM PDT by dsrtsage ( Complexity is just simple lacking imagination)
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To: untenured

Its interesting how for Jerôme Fourquet, what Americans call globalization, for French means “Americanization.”


8 posted on 04/15/2022 8:18:06 AM PDT by PGR88
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To: Tell It Right
If you want to be even more honest the decline of Christianity began long before.

The french revolution was virulently anti-Christian.

And "decadent, depraved, hedonistic, left wing" is pretty much a description of france for the past 400 years.

Remember how they were whining at us about how we were so uptight about married politicians cheating and should just accept that everyone in government had a mistress or three?

9 posted on 04/15/2022 8:24:11 AM PDT by Harmless Teddy Bear (It is better to light a single flame thrower then curse the darkness. A bunch of them is better yet)
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To: Flavious_Maximus
When they say “Americanization” they are referring to the decadent, depraved, hedonistic, left wing Americans, i.e. those members of the scum-of-the-earth democratic party.

No they aren't...read the article to find out why your wrong.

10 posted on 04/15/2022 8:25:45 AM PDT by mac_truck (aide toi et dieu t'aidera )
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To: Flavious_Maximus

I’m not so sure. What kind of people name their kids Kevin and Dylan, eats at “Buffalo Grill”, listens to American country music, wants a suburban home with a garden and maybe a swimming pool, and is not down with globalization?


11 posted on 04/15/2022 8:29:18 AM PDT by BradyLS (DO NOT FEED THE BEARS!)
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To: untenured

The French love Americans! French people can be found in airports, hotels and bistros extending their hands to visiting Americans in friendship... palms up.


12 posted on 04/15/2022 8:29:59 AM PDT by Seruzawa ("The Political left is the Garden of Eden of incompetence" - Marx the Smarter (Groucho))
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To: untenured

Interesting read, thanks for posting. I agree with the author - the divide here is similar and is shaping along class lines. It may be wishful thinking, but I believe it is bad for the Democrat party. And that makes me smile.


13 posted on 04/15/2022 8:41:26 AM PDT by H.Bowman
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To: wny

14 posted on 04/15/2022 8:48:56 AM PDT by Major Matt Mason (Antifa/BLM = Azov Battalion.)
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To: Harmless Teddy Bear

A man’s inability to stay loyal to his wife should exclude him from public office. If he cheats on his wife, he will really screw over the citizen. That’s why this country has gone to crap and why China has taken over. There is no love or loyalty left in America. We’ve turned into France’s narcissistic twin.


15 posted on 04/15/2022 8:54:30 AM PDT by dragonblustar (2 Peter 2:14,1 Corinthians 6:18-20)
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To: untenured

The globalists have captured America.


16 posted on 04/15/2022 8:55:38 AM PDT by Lurkinanloomin ( (Natural born citizens are born here of citizen parents)(Know Islam, No Peace-No Islam, Know Peace)
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To: untenured
True, but snotty. Richer, more educated Frenchies aren't any better. Nor were they as great in the past as they thought they were.

But France was right when they didn't get suckered and sucked into Bush's Iraq adventure.

17 posted on 04/15/2022 8:57:00 AM PDT by x
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To: Seruzawa

Don’t take Paris for the whole country. Parisians hate everybody.


18 posted on 04/15/2022 8:59:09 AM PDT by x
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To: untenured

The French Commune is all you need to know.


19 posted on 04/15/2022 9:06:40 AM PDT by 2banana (Common ground with islamic terrorists-they want to die for allah and we want to arrange the meeting)
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To: Harmless Teddy Bear
Agreed. About the only thing you can say about the French that's "pro-Christian" compared to the U.S. is they'd riot over gay marriage.

Are the French more risqué than Americans? Yes. And they were pro-gay long before the U.S. But they got heavily offended at the idea of bridging secular hedonism (gay) with Christian virtue (marriage).

20 posted on 04/15/2022 9:08:36 AM PDT by Tell It Right (1st Thessalonians 5:21 -- Put everything to the test, hold fast to that which is true.)
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