Culture | The river and the sea

Emmanuel Macron wants to redefine French culture

But some Francophone writers are not impressed

|PARIS

A PHILOSOPHY graduate and unpublished novelist, Emmanuel Macron treats French culture like a national treasure, and the French language as a jewel. “French is the language of reason, it’s the language of light,” the president declared when inaugurating the Louvre in Abu Dhabi, a silver-domed gallery on a sandy shore that he called a museum “of the desert and light”. Mr Macron has vowed to make French the first language in Africa, and “perhaps” the world; he named a young bestselling Franco-Moroccan novelist, Leïla Slimani, to lead this mission. Yet his campaign to rejuvenate French, and to open the country up to writers who share the language around the world, has inadvertently revived a French culture war.

This article appeared in the Culture section of the print edition under the headline “The river and the sea”

Running hot: America’s extraordinary economic gamble

From the February 10th 2018 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Culture

History podcasts are booming

Why listening to stories about the past are a present pastime

“Deadpool & Wolverine” is revolting, but popular

The film has had the highest-grossing opening of an R-rated film


Slow down: longer races offer fans more than sprints do

Middle- and long-distance races have a drama that short ones cannot match


We enjoyed reading these books on holiday. You might, too

A selection of titles chosen by The Economist’s journalists

A moving memoir probes the contradictions of modern China

Edward Wong narrates his father’s journey from servant of the party to escapee

Few writers have seen America more clearly than James Baldwin

A century after his birth, Baldwin remains one of the country’s most important authors