UC Center Program Courses - Fall 2007
PCC 116. Cultural Identities of France
Prof. Stéphane Dufoix

Office Hours
TBA
Lecture
Monday 10:40am - 1:40pm
Section
Wednesday 3:00-4:00pm

Since the end of the Second World War, France has undergone formidable changes, and French “national identity” along with the political ideal republicanism has been seriously challenged. Much of the 1980s and 1990s, indeed, was spent worrying about the “crisis of French identity”, as intellectuals and the “political classes” attempted to make sense of France’s history and identity in light of the challenges posed by immigration (especially non-European immigration), feminism, economic and cultural globalization (considered an American-directed movement), and France’s peculiar version of “multiculturalism.” The first years of the new millennium see France trying to maintain its distinctiveness in a world of globalization, while the 2002 presidential election has, more than ever, demonstrated the power of “national identity” discourses. To understand these movements and their impact on France, this course considers contemporary debates in French political life surrounding the politics of recognition, national identity, and French “exceptionalism” in a European and global context. [History, Sociology, Political Science, Anthropology, French Studies, European Studies] 6.0 Credits
COURSE MATERIALS
  • Herman Lebovics, Bringing the Empire Back Home: France in the Global Age, Duke University Press, 2004
  • Azouz Begag and Alec Hargreaves, Ethnicity and Equality, France in the Balance
  • Articles and book chapters reproduced in the Course Reader (hereby referred to as [CR])
  • Recommended readings for each week are either online, in the Reserve Cabinet [RC], or on the Course Reserve Shelf [RS]
  • Online materials, including the weekly dossiers that will be discussed in lecture and section. Note that for any set of topics covered by the weekly dossiers, students are urged to search materials using the CDL (in particular, Lexis-Nexis) and www.scholar.google
  • There are also separate Web Resources Pages for this course with links to online reference sites, as well as other research material. The best English-language summary of French current events on the web is The Tocqueville Connection.

COURSE REQUIREMENTS

Students are required to do all reading before the first weekly session and to attend all guest lectures and sites visits scheduled during the semester. Students are required to complete the weekly readings comprised of secondary sources (in English) found in the assigned books, the Course Reader, and directly on the web (with links from the syllabus). In addition, most weeks require the perusal of a "dossier" of primary sources including speeches, articles in the newspapers by experts, politicians or scholars, government reports.

  • Weekly Readings and Class Participation (20% of the final grade)
  • Writing Assignments (30% of the final grade)
  • Two short papers (5-7 pages each) on two different topics to be chosen in consultation with the instructor.
  • Mid-term exam (20% of the final grade)
  • Final exam (30%).

COURSE SCHEDULE

WEEK 1. September 10-14
Introduction
What is France and What is a Nation?
Reading:

  • Begag and Hargraves, Introduction
  • Lebovics, Introduction
  • Fernand Braudel, “Introduction” in The Identity of France, vol. 1 History and Environment, Collins, 1988, pp. 15-28 [CR]
  • Ernest Renan, “What is a Nation?”, text of a conference delivered at the Sorbonne-University, 11 March 1882 in Ernest Renan, Qu’est-ce qu’une Nation?, Paris, Presses-Pocket, 1992

I. Framing the Debates: The Parties, The Immigration and the Constitution
This section will focus on three sets of phenomena that framed the various debates on French national identity: the existence of a specific party system that shifted from a classical to a more complex one in the mid-80’s; the recent history and composition of immigration in France; the existence of a “constitutional lock” that constraints the possible evolutions towards pluralism (of regional languages, of “peoples” composing France…)

WEEK 2. September 17-21
Parties and Electoral Politics

Reading:

WEEK 3. September 24-28
Immigration in France

Reading:

WEEK 4. October 1-5
Territory, Language, and the Constitution

[ASSIGNMENT 1 DUE]

Reading:

  • Begag and Hargreaves, Chapter 3
  • Lebovics, Chapter 1
  • Alain Renaut, “The French Debate on Regional Languages” in Comprendre. Revue de Philosophie et de Sciences Sociales, special issue “Les identités culturelles”, edited by Will Kymlicka and Sylvie Mesure, n.1, 2000, pp. 381-400
  • Denis Lacorne, “Corsica, 'Multiculturalism', and the Jacobin Republic” in Correspondence (Winter 2001)

II. The Politics of Recognition: Race, Gender, Sexual Preferences
France is a Republic, where public law officially forbids the political recognition of any subgrouping (of race, gender, or ethnicity) in the public sphere. In the recent years, this republican model has been frequently challenged by claims for the official recognition of gender and sexual differences; by racism; by the politics of communitarianism and affirmative action; and by the recognition of “zones de non-legalité” within French territory.
General readings for this section of the course:

  • Jeremy Jennings, “Citizenship, Republicanism and Multiculturalism in Contemporary France”, British Journal of Political Science, 30, 2000, p. 575-598
  • Cécile Laborde, “The Culture(s) of the republic. Nationalism and Multiculturalism in French Republican Thought”, Political Theory, 29:5, October 2001, p. 716-735.

WEEK 5. October 8-12
French Exceptionalism I: Neo-republicanism and the PACS

Reading:

WEEK 6. October 15-19
French Exceptionalism II: Gender Parity

Reading:

WEEK 7. October 22-26

MID-TERM

FALL BREAK

WEEK 8. November 5-9
Racism, Discrimination and Affirmative Action

Reading:

  • Begag and Hargreaves, Chapter 6
  • Erik Bleich, “Antiracism without Races: Politics and Policy in a 'Color-Blind' State” in French Politics, Culture and Society, vol.18, n.3, Fall 2000, pp. 48-74 [CR]
  • Michel Wieviorka, “Identity and Difference: Reflections on the French Non-Debate on Multiculturalism” in Thesis Eleven, n.47, November 1996, pp. 49-71 [CR]
  • Daniel Sabbagh, “Affirmative Action at Science Po” in French Politics, Culture and Society, vol.20, n.3, Fall 2002

III. National Identity
The ideal and traditional view of “French exceptionalism” has been challenged by both the presence of migrants (and of their children) in France, and the acceleration of globalization in recent years. This final section considers three articulations of the debate over identity: the  national (recent changes in nationality law); the European (the opposition to the integration of France into Europe); and the global (“French exceptionalism” in contemporary economics, politics and culture).

WEEK 9. November 12-16
Nationality and Citizenship

Reading:

  • Begag and Hargreaves, Chapter 7
  • Maxim Silverman, “Nationality and Citizenship” in Deconstructing the Nation: Immigration, Race and Citizenship in Modern France, Routledge, 1992, pp. 126-152 [CR]
  • Patrick Weil, “Introduction” in Mission d’étude des législations sur l’immigration et la nationalité, Report to the Prime Minister, Paris, La Documentation française, 1997

WEEK 10. November 19-23
Battlefields of the Republic : Islam, Laïcité and the French Riots of 2005

[ASSIGNMENT 2 DUE]

Reading:

WEEK 11. November 26-30
The Return of “French national identity” : the presidential campaign of 2007

Reading:

  • Lebovics, Chapter 4
  • Nicolas Sarkozy’s speech in Caen, 9 March 2007
  • Ségolène Royal’s speech in Marseille, 23 Mars 2007

WEEK 12. December 3-7
History, Memory and Repentance
Visit to the Cité nationale de l’histoire de l’immigration

Reading

  • Begag and Hargreaves, “Conclusion”
  • Lebovics, Chapter 3 and 5

WEEK 13. December 10-14
Review and Final Exam