About Me
- Kevin Elstob
- In my interests below, I list French language, cinema, theatre, politics, art, and wine. And while French brought me to a lot of these things, I also like all of them in a more general way. I really love languages and their connections. I also have a thing about how theatre and cinema, art, politics and wine all hook up in some way. As I think of these ideas, I can hear the thwonk of the cork coming out of the neck of the bottle, and the gentle squeak as the cork is twisted off the tire-bouchon. Ah, that oakey, musty, acidic aroma wafting, wafting and people talking and talking and talking. And, oh they found out we have some sets of boules and they want to play pétanque. "Let's pick teams and play in the shade of those plane trees." The sounds of summer resonate: the crunch of the terrain under foot, the click of the iron bocce knocking in the players' hands, and the soft kiss of the wooden cochonnet as it hits the ground scuttling down to its resting point where it will await the arrival of each team's battle-worn aggies.
Tuesday, March 25, 2014
French Municipal Elections: High Abstention Rate and the Advance of the National Front
The first round of the French Municipal Elections in which citizens vote for this local representatives and mayors took place on Sunday. The results showed a great deal of dissatisfaction among French citizens with the two leading parties. The party that holds most power including the Presidency (François Hollande) is the Parti Socialiste (the Left) the other leading party is the UMP (the Right) - Union pour un Mouvement Populaire. But, Sunday's elections showed that support for these two major parties is eroding with many people deciding not to vote- abstention rate was around 36% - or to vote for the National Front, which runs on an anti-immigrant platform, but which has also become something of an anti-establishment party as well. Read and listen to these two informative reports from Radio France Internationale and France 24.
Tuesday, March 18, 2014
Marseille the Kaleidoscope
Marseille
Often when we study a time and place we seek out primary
sources to provide us with a window into society. A primary source is “a first-hand, direct source of
information or research, such as the words of a person who is the subject,
official government records, or the memoirs of others; document examined that
had not been amended by a third party…”
Primary sources tend to be snippets of history and studying
them encourages us to look for other evidence in order to complete our
investigation. On the other hand,
when we look at secondary sources - such as newspaper, magazine, TV, or
documentary representations of an event or question - we don’t always look
around for more since the report tends to be a synthesis of several pieces of
evidence that gives us a fuller view of the situation. However, it can be equally as rewarding
to compare several secondary sources about a particular situation. Brining together reports from a
variety of sources lets us build a
more complex and complete view of a situation, event, or question and deepens our
understanding. A case in point
would be these three reports about Marseille. Marseilles is known as France’s second biggest city, the
oldest city in France, and the busiest and largest port on the
Mediterranean. But is Marseille
France’s real capital, France’s cultural capital, or France’s murder
capital? These three reports from
three different English-language sources offer a multi-pronged answer to that
question while raising other questions that we can look into. As we read the reports, we will find
some themes that
© OTCM/ADD
This article appeared in the Real Estate section of France Today July 6, 2010. British journalist Suzanna Chambers, who lives with
her family in the south of France wrote the article. She is a regular reporter for France Today and other British newspapers – including The Sunday Times. She also edits the luxury real estate
magazine Carpe Diem, and contributes
to Angloinfo.com and various lifestyle magazines.
France Today is a magazine oriented towards an international Francophile audience
interested in French travel, culture, gastronomy, society & politics, real
estate for sale and vacation rentals.
This article appeared in print – 10/4/13 – in the Travel
section of The New York Times, with
the headline “The Real Capital Of France.” Michael
Kimmelman is the author. He is a
well-known and prize-winning architecture critic at The New York Times.
In this second link there is the same short documentary but this one is from
the Journeyman web site and has the transcript in English of the documentary)
Frontline: Marseille is presented and produced by Evan Williams. For over 20 years he has been a TV news
and current affairs reporter for SBS, an Australian national television
network, as well as Channel 4 in the UK, and PBS Frontline World in the US.
The documentary appears on the Journeyman Pictures channel on
youtube. Journeyman Pictures
gathers documentaries and reports from producers around the world that offer
high-quality and thought-provoking journalism.
Tuesday, March 4, 2014
Paris a city for savoring life and where that comes from
This a.m. I was cutting grapefruit and listening to NPR's "Morning Edition." The show featured a lovely incisive and succinct report on when and why the city of Paris took on some of its characteristics as a city of light and romance.
The prompt for the story is the publication of How Paris Became Paris Joan DeJean's latest book about French culture and history. Joan DeJean is a Trustee Professor of Romance Languages at the U of Pennsylvania. She writes fascinating, insightful historical studies that give an entertaining and very readable account of some of the major themes in French civilization and culture. One of her previous works is The Essence of Style: How the French Invented High Fashion, Fine Food, Chic Cafes, Style, Sophistication, and Glamour. This morning's piece of journalism reminds us of how the pursuit of leisure and pleasure - loisir and plaisir - have molded aspects of society that we often take for granted or dismiss because they are the fun-side of life.
The prompt for the story is the publication of How Paris Became Paris Joan DeJean's latest book about French culture and history. Joan DeJean is a Trustee Professor of Romance Languages at the U of Pennsylvania. She writes fascinating, insightful historical studies that give an entertaining and very readable account of some of the major themes in French civilization and culture. One of her previous works is The Essence of Style: How the French Invented High Fashion, Fine Food, Chic Cafes, Style, Sophistication, and Glamour. This morning's piece of journalism reminds us of how the pursuit of leisure and pleasure - loisir and plaisir - have molded aspects of society that we often take for granted or dismiss because they are the fun-side of life.
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