SHARE
COPY LINK
For members

INSIDE FRANCE

Inside France: Assisted dying, radical politics and rude words

From plans to reform the laws on assisted dying and sexual consent to French casinos, rude words and whether France is truly as left-wing as anglophones believe, our weekly newsletter Inside France looks at what we have been talking about in France this week.

Inside France: Assisted dying, radical politics and rude words
Protest stickers in Place de la République, Paris. Photo; AFP

Inside France is our weekly look at some of the news, talking points and gossip in France that you might not have heard about. It’s published each Saturday and members can receive it directly to their inbox, by going to their newsletter preferences or adding their email to the sign-up box in this article.

Consent law

Another week, another piece of ground-breaking feminist legislation from Emmanuel Macron? Er, perhaps. 

The president says he wants to enshrine explicit sexual consent into French law – an ‘only yes means yes’ law in other words. While this sounds pretty radical, it was said during a video chat with a group of feminist campaigners and to me sounded more like an off-the-cuff remark than a planned-out policy announcement. The chat has not been followed up with any kind of public announcement.

In the meantime, women continue to share stories of French men in public life behaving with apparent impunity in cases of sexual harassment and assault.

Still, it may happen, we’ll see.

Right to die

More concrete plans appeared at the start of this week with the details of a bill to legalise assisted dying in France – this will be debated in parliament in May and is the end of a very lengthy consultation period in which a citizens council was convened to explore more fully what is always likely to be a difficult subject.

While the Catholic Church has been predictably outraged, it’s interesting to note that there is strong public support for the idea in France.

Talking France

We discuss this bill, and its social and political implications, in this week’s Talking France podcast, as well as where you’ll find French casinos, why the European elections are a big deal in France and all the things you can do in a French post office. Listen here or on the link below

Left leaning

And my favourite article from this week is this one from my colleague Genevieve Mansfield looking at how left-wing France really is. Anglophone media tend to casually toss out sentences ‘France has always been at the vanguard of leftist politics’ – but is this actually true? Or is this just about how we see France, rather than how France truly is?

Analysis: Exactly how left-wing is France?

My pet (and very unscientific) theory is that it’s to do with the artistic presentation of street protest in France – protests themselves are often strongly visual, so they are widely photographed and these are the images that pop into our heads when we think about French politics.

Protests in Place de la Nation, Paris, in 2002 after far-right candidate Jean-Marie Le Pen reached the second round of the presidential election. Photographed by Guillaume Herbaut for Libération newspaper

Accent on the rude

And this week I got chatting to a fellow Brit in France who teaches English to French college students – and she told me that her favourite sentence to test their pronunciation is “focus on decades of household growth in Nepal”.

Say that in a thick French accent and it becomes somewhat X-rated . . .

Inside France is our weekly look at some of the news, talking points and gossip in France that you might not have heard about. It’s published each Saturday and members can receive it directly to their inbox, by going to their newsletter preferences or adding their email to the sign-up box in this article.

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.
For members

INSIDE FRANCE

Inside France: Internet regulation, French language battles and 90-year-old barbers

From screen time to another French language controversy, via France's attitude to the internet and a few bad puns, our weekly newsletter Inside France looks at what we have been talking about in France this week.

Inside France: Internet regulation, French language battles and 90-year-old barbers

Inside France is our weekly look at some of the news, talking points and gossip in France that you might not have heard about. It’s published each Saturday and members can receive it directly to their inbox, by going to their newsletter preferences or adding their email to the sign-up box in this article.

Wild west web

This week a commission of experts produced a detailed report on the effect of screens on children, along with some far-reaching recommendations including a complete screen ban (including TV) for toddlers, no smartphones for under 13s and avoiding social media like Instagram or TikTok for all under 18s.

This is at this stage just a series of recommendations, but the intention is to draw up legislation on this topic – which is being discussed around the world as more people worry about the effects of too much screen time on youngsters.

As a relatively new technology, it’s not uncommon for legislation to lag behind the rapidly changing and developing online world. But while some countries seem to view the internet as a kind of natural phenomenon which cannot be legislated for – like the weather – France has a history of being more interventionist.

From the ‘GAFA’ legislation that eventually forced tech giants like Apple and Facebook to pay tax in the countries that they operate in to legislation to limit the pictures of children that parents can publish on social media – France has shown itself at least willing to try.

As Emmanuel Macron said this week, legislation is more effective if done on an EU-wide basis, and it’s notable that the EU Commissioner leading the charge to try and make social media companies clean up their act is a Frenchman – the charismatic (or should that be attention-seeking?) Thierry Breton.

Talking France

We discuss the screens report – and the reaction of French parents – on this week’s Talking France podcast, as well as French May traditions, changes to EU travel and France’s oldest barber.

That barber is 90 years old and still working, by the way, one of a growing number of French people who are not only living to a ripe old age, but choosing to carry on working – for all that the country still has the lowest official retirement age in Europe.

Listen here or on the link below.

Say non or not?

A parliamentary resolution to ‘say non to speaking English during the Paris Olympics’ gained worldwide media coverage this week – but there is more to this story.

One the one hand a small group of mostly right-wing MPs passed a completely non-binding resolution – on the other hand the people actually organising the Games have shown themselves more than happy to speak English if required and to provide all information in both English and French. Likewise signage on the public transport is being put out in multiple languages to make life easy for international visitors.

Without wanting to over-state things too much, you might almost see this as the face of the old France versus the new – and it’s certainly noticeable that younger French people tend to be happy and even excited by an opportunity to speak English, and don’t see speaking other languages as any kind of loss to French culture – which happily remains as strong as ever.

Wordplay

And as a dedicated fan of terrible puns, I couldn’t help but laugh/groan at this one (say the name out loud)*

The French are fond of puns and wordplay, which is one reason that French humour can be hard for foreigners to understand. Another reason is that it’s highly referential, so if you don’t get the political/sporting/cultural reference then you won’t get the joke.

READ ALSO Are the French really ‘not funny’?

But then, all humour is based on culture as much as it is on language – as witnessed by the number of British comedies that get remade for an American audience. 

Inside France is our weekly look at some of the news, talking points and gossip in France that you might not have heard about. It’s published each Saturday and members can receive it directly to their inbox, by going to their newsletter preferences or adding their email to the sign-up box in this article.

* The name when said out loud sounds like ‘J’ai pas de riz’ or ‘I have no rice’ – hence the reply ‘no worries, just eat pasta’. 

SHOW COMMENTS