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French Culture in the Shadow of Charlie Hebdo (PAMLA Portland 2015)

French Culture in the Shadow of Charlie Hebdo (PAMLA Portland 2015)

Publié le par Marc Escola (Source : Gilles Viennot)

The panel "French Culture in the Shadow of Charlie Hebdo",

held on Friday, Nov. 6, at the PAMLA 2015 conference in Portland, Oregon, is still looking for a panelist.

It is a great opportunity, perhaps for a local scholar or a graduate student, to share their work on a crucial subject.

Bernard Maris, the French economist and college professor, had written a book on Michel Houellebecq, which focused on the insightful views, in terms of economics, developed in his novels. Maris, who reviewed Houellebecq’s latest novel, Submission, in Charlie Hebdo, had just sent the revised version of now published book, Et si on aimait la France, days before he was shot in the Parisian terrorists attacks. The focus of the panel is to discuss texts (fiction or non-fiction) and analysis which, in the face of an extremely complex situation, offer a valid description of it, and lead to constructive and fruitful suggestions for France (and perhaps more widely the West).

As evidenced in Houellebecq’s novels, a significant number of people in France have been drowning in doubts and disenchantment. The situation in the poor areas located on the outskirts of most towns and cities, referred to as “banlieues”, with their “tours HLM” (cultural equivalent of the American inner cities and their projects), has been problematic since the 70s. There, often, an impoverished community struggles to find a job, while aspiring at finding success and gaining access to consumerism. In these areas more than anywhere else in France, a minority of young males faces an identity crisis and sometimes turn to wrong role models, who rule through violence. Bourgeois society looks away from this blind mental spot. A significant part of France’s 5 millions of Muslims (who are underrepresented) lives there.

Today, the rise of Islamic fundamentalism, in connection to the difficult heritage of decolonization, forces France to deal efficiently with a pressing danger. The goal of our panel is to reflect on how France can restore hope, prosperity and civil safety. How can it appease the resentments? How can it regain the trust of its African and Middle-Eastern partners? In the face of the recent killings in Paris, perpetrated by troubled men who were born and raised in France, the French have a duty to cure and reinvigorate their social bonds. Education must aim at re-establishing reason and creation over despair and destruction. These appalling murders, as well as the tens of thousands of other lives shockingly lost in various places they echo, should open a new exchange between nations, and between individuals. How can France (and the West) bring back clarity in the vision of the ones who find theirs obscured?

Our panel welcomes informed narrations and documents, fiction or non-fiction, which offer descriptions, explanations, and perhaps lay foundations for the necessary healing process to engage. Panelists are welcome to focus on the particular angle they deem interesting. 

This panel will take place during the 113th annual conference of PAMLA (Pacific Ancient and Modern Language Association), held in Portland, Oregon, in November 6-8, 2015. Our panel is scheduled on Friday, Nov. 6, in the evening.

Please send a 300-word abstract and the title of your presentation to: gviennot@uark.edu