Travel France Books about society and politics in France
N. A. Addinall
(ed)
French Political Parties: A Documentary Guide
(U of Wales Press, UK). Clear and concise textbook introduction to the
constitution and political parties of the Fifth Republic; quotations
and source materials are not translated but this need not deter
non-French speakers.
Roland BarthesMythologies
(Vintage; Noonday) and
The Eiffel Tower
(California UP, US).
Mythologies
is an immensely readable structuralist critique on the socio-historical
importance of myth and its signs in France today, accompanied by a
series of quirky examples. The short text, The Eiffel Tower , demystifies the Eiffel tower as
synecdoche of Paris - he accepts Maupassant's solution of eliminating
it from the vista by going to have dinner in the Eiffel Tower
restaurant.
Jean BaudrillardSelected Writings
(Stanford UP). Essential reading to get an overview of the most
interesting contemporary French philosopher and artist. His notion of
the simulacrum (the image of the essence of an object) and the role of
the object as sign within the consumer system is complex but
revelatory.
Simone de BeauvoirThe Second Sex
(Vintage). One of the prime texts of Western feminism, written in 1949,
covering women's inferior status in history, literature, mythology,
psychoanalysis, philosophy and everyday life. The style is dry and
intellectual, but the subject matter easily compensates.
Denis BellocSlow Death in Paris
(Quartet, UK). A harrowing account of a heroin addict in Paris. Not
recommended holiday reading but if you want to know about the seedy
underbelly of the city this is the book.
Mary BlumeA French Affair: The Paris Beat 1965-1998
(Plume). Incisive and witty observations on contemporary French life by the
International Herald Tribune
reporter who was stationed there for three decades.
Émilie CarlesWild Herb Soup
(Indigo, UK). A moving and inspiring autobiography of a girl born and
raised in the remote Alpine valley of the Névache near Briançon in the
early years of the twentieth century. As well as giving an interesting
account of peasant life, it records the development of social
conscience and an extraordinary moral toughness as Émilie becomes aware
of the brutality and harshness of peasant life, sees her brothers die
in World War I, experiences Resistance in World War II, and finally
finds herself, as an old lady, leading the campaign to stop the
desecration of her beautiful natal valley by the construction of an autoroute
.
Claire DuchenFeminism in France: From May '68 to Mitterrand
(Routledge). Charts the evolution of the women's movement through to
its mid-1980s crisis, clarifying the divergent political stances and
feminist theory that informs the various groups and placing them in the
wider French political context.
Jonathan FenbyOn the Brink
(Warner; Arcade Publishing). While France isn't perhaps quite as
endangered as the title suggests, this provocative book takes a long,
hard look at the problems facing contemporary France.
Gisèle HalimiMilk for the Orange Tree
(Quartet, UK). A gutsy autobiographical story of a woman who was born
in Tunisia, the daughter of an Orthodox Jewish family, and who ran away
to Paris to become a lawyer, and defender of women's rights, Algerian
FLN fighters and all unpopular causes.
Bernard Henri-LévyAdventures on the Freedom Road: The French Intellectuals in the 20th Century
(Harvill). Huge, clever and complex essays by contemporary
philosopher-celebrity, mercilessly analysing the response of all the
great French thinkers, of Left and Right, to the key events of the
century. Easy to dip into, surprisingly readable and very provocative.
David ThomsonDemocracy in France Since 1870
(Cassell, UK, o/p). An enquiry into why a country with such a strong
socialist tradition should have had so many reactionary governments.
Gillian TindallCélestine: Voices from a French Village
(Minerva; Holt). Intrigued by some nineteenth century love letters left
behind in the house she has bought in Chassignolles, Berry, Tindall
researches the history of the village back to the 1840s. She produces a
meticulous, thoughtful and moving portrait of rural French life and its
slow but dramatic transformation. A brilliant piece of social history.
Eugen WeberMy France
(Harvard UP). A collection of essays, fascinating and offbeat, about
numerous aspects of French culture and politics. Some prior knowledge
of mainstream French history is needed to make the most of them.
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