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Legal/institutional dominance of French. Being challenged by the EU for the first time since the revolutionAlso being challenged on an international scale by EnglishWill traditional protectionist linguistic policies continue to be effective?. France has:. Large territoryNo official religionShared historical consciousnessCommon legal/administrative systemCommon language.
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1. Language & Nationalism in Europe Ch 3 France: One state, one nation, one language?
3. France has: Large territory
No official religion
Shared historical consciousness
Common legal/administrative system
Common language
4. Some French language facts Language is seen a a pillar of the nation-state, as “cement”
French became the official language in 1992, in preparation for the Maastricht treaty
There are no adult monolingual speakers of regional languages in France (why is this important?)
There are no official statistics on regional languages (it is illegal to gather such information, considered racist)
5. Some historical facts Q: What language did the Gauls speak?
6. Some historical facts Q: What language did the Gauls speak?
A: Celtic
Q: Who brought Romance (i.e., Latin that developed into French)?
7. Some historical facts Q: What language did the Gauls speak?
A: Celtic
Q: Who brought Romance (i.e., Latin that developed into French)?
A: The Romans, in the 2nd cent CE
Result: Gallo-Romance, which is Latin with a Gaulish substratum. Frankish invaders (Germanic) later (5th cent) impose Frankish superstratum
8. Nationalism – a French invention? 1790s, a post-Revolutionary idea
Language and homeland give a sense of national belonging
If national groups are frustrated, they may turn to terrorism, as in Corsica & Basque country
9. Traditionally recognized regional languages: Germanic: Flemish & Alsatian (NE corners)
Celtic: Breton (NW corner)
Non-IE: Basque (SW corner)
Romance: Catalan (SE corner), Corsican
10. Regional variants that are not traditionally recognized: Occitan (large region of S. France)
Franco-Provencal (mid- East)
Langues d’oïl (N. France; controversial because they belong to the same group as standard French, but they do not enjoy rights/status)
Arabic
Various Creoles
11. Basque Modern descendant of Aquitanian
Basque academy & unified orthography est. 1919
80K Basque speakers in France
Basque immersion schools est. 1969, but opposed by French govt.; first recognized in 1982 and first funded in 1983
Basque straddles two states, creating conflicting loyalties
12. Basque, cont’d. “4+3=1” – a proposal to unite 4 Spanish provinces and 3 French provinces to create one Basque state
ETA (Basque Fatherland & Freedom) established 1959 in Spain; French equivalent is Iparretarak
Most people are against violence, but violence seems to work
13. Breton Derived from Gaulish Celtic languages
A few words survive in French (chemin, mouton) and English (budget)
250K speakers
Use in church helped it survive the Revolution
25% of male Breton speakers died in WWI
Breton schools created in 1977, funding in 1994
14. Breton, cont’d. Most people learn it as a second language today, not as a mother tongue
Former nationalist movements have aligned with Germans (WWII) or communists
Little nationalist aspiration today
Focus on ties with Welsh, Irish, Scottish Gaelic
15. Dutch/Flemish Steadily shrinking in France (but spoken in neighboring Belgium)
80K speakers in France, but only 2% of children in the area can speak Flemish (all can speak French)
No legal status
No TV
One bilingual radio station has some Flemish
16. Alsatian Germanic dialects of Alsace & Lorraine, which were part of Germany until 1918
Intense Frenchification between wars and post WWII
Now declining rapidly
Alsatian is spoken, but Standard German is written and taught in schools
Alsace d’abord movement is very small
17. Occitan/Langues d’oc Developed from Gallo-Romance
Closer to Catalan, Italian, and Spanish than to French
12-13M inhabitants, but how many use Occitan?
48% understand
28% speak
13% read
6% write
18. Occitan/Langues d’oc cont’d. Occitan has no official status
Literature dates from the 11th cent
13 cent there was a crusade against them
Is it one nation or two?
Provence & Languedoc-Rousillon
Provence literary renaissance in 19th c
1935 Grammaire occitane & orthography
19. Occitan/Langues d’oc cont’d. Between the world wars it was forbidden to speak a regional language in school
Little support for political independence
Occitan immersion schools are now spreading and very popular
Occitan is potentially a link to the world abroad: Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, Catalan -- it is closer to all of these and thus affords an advantage
20. Franco-Provençal Also spoken in Italy and elsewhere
Very fragmented
Not taught in France
No political profile in France
21. Catalan The official language of 8M people living mostly in Spain
180K speakers in France
Supported in schools
Intellectual revival since the 1960s
Political party aims at identity, not autonomy
22. Corsican French authority resisted in Corsica
Annexed by France in 1768
Until 1950s some Corsicans did not speak French
143K speakers
Very strong nationalism
Front de libération national corse (FLNC) is an active terrorist group
23. Regional languages -- conclusions EU opens up new trade relations -- Paris is no longer the sole center
Belonging to a minority group is not incompatible with being French
Regional languages have economic advantage due to links to other countries, giving them positive associations
24. Emergence of French Roman conquest of Gaul 125-124 BCE
All of Gaul becomes Roman province in 51 BCE
Acquisition of Latin very desirable
Gaulish (Celtic) died out by end of 6th c
5th c Germanic migrations/invasions
Roman Empire collapsed 476 CE
25. Emergence of French, cont’d. Conversion of Clovis, King of Franks, in 496, considered by some to be the beginning of the French nation
Name “French” derives from Frankish
Langues d’oc were less influenced by both Gaulish & Frankish forces
Latin became the literary language and was taught in school in the langues d’oïl region
26. Emergence of French, cont’d. Some langues d’oïl are not mutually intelligible
Trouble in schools -- children mix langues d’oïl with French
langues d’oïl not recognized by gov’t until 1980s
27. Institutionalization of French France grew gradually 1229-1860
New territories had to accept French as administrative language, but did not have to speak it
After Revolution, language was considered essential to unify state
Using French would “free” people from “patois” (substandard language)
28. Institutionalization of French, cont’d. All other languages were forbidden
French was considered “the perfect language”, and spread to the courts of other countries
French, once considered egalitarian, became a language of repression
Toubon law (1994) makes no concessions to the regional languages
Officially there are no minorities, all citizens are equal, strong resistance to granting legal status to minority languages
29. Challenges to the supremacy of French Threat of English
External -- English is becoming the language of diplomacy
Internal -- Borrowings
Protectionist linguistic policies since 1960
Each gov’t ministry has a terminological commission
Since 1990 commissions have representatives from other French-speaking countries
Fines for failure to use French words
30. Legal pressures Toubon law imposes use of French, rejects borrowings
Toubon law is ridiculed in the press
Toubon law is contrary to EU practice
Gradual increase in recognition of regional languages, but Charter on Regional & Minority languages has not been ratified
Position of French in the world is weakened
France is trying to build positive ties to former colonies
31. Conclusions France used language to establish unity, but then there was outside pressure from English and internal resentment from minority languages
Most minorities probably do not want separation, just recognition
In 2000, only 2% of children were educated in a minority language