Demystifying the French: A Panel Discussion
We have all heard clichés about the French: they would be rude, romantic, or would eat frogs. But what about it?
Some information on the clichés about the French:
- it is often thought that the French are the only people who eat frogs. This is not true! You can also eat them in Indonesia, China, or Greece.
- It is said that the French are obsessed with food. According to a survey, 93% of them consider that food has a preponderant place in their life. 75% admit to talking about food very regularly with their relatives. Finally, 66% of French people say they like shop for groceries.
- One may often think of the stereotype of the Frenchman with his baguette. It is not totally a cliché since 95% of French people eat bread every day!
The Federation of Alliances Françaises USA hosted an online discussion to demystify the French on Saturday, August 28,
2021. Mark Greenside, Janet Hulstrand, Adrian Leeds, and Harriet Welty Rochefort were discussing these clichés.
You can now watch the video on YouTube:
About the PANELISTS
Mark Greenside was born and raised in New York, and now lives in northern
California. In 1991
he was dragged to a little village in Brittany by a girlfriend to spend the summer. He and the girlfriend fell out of love with each other,
but he fell in love with the village, and to his astonishment ended up buying a home there, a rollicking adventure he recounts in I’ll
Never Be French (no matter what I do), described
by the San Francisco Chronicle as a “fun and high-spirited read, and proof that one is never too old to find true
happiness in life.” In his latest, and equally entertaining (and helpful) book, he tells the continuing story of how he is (not
quite) Mastering the Art of French Living.
Janet Hulstrand grew up in Minnesota, has lived in New York and Washington D.C., and has spent as much time as she can in France since her first trip there in 1978. Since 1997 she has taught “Paris: A Literary Adventure” for City University of New York study abroad programs; she also teaches literature and culture classes focusing on France for Politics & Prose bookstore. She writes for Bonjour Paris, France Today, and France Revisited, and is the author of Demystifying the French: How to Love Them, and Make Them Love You, which Jake Lamar called “a witty, wise, and keenly observed cultural handbook.” She lives in the lovely little village of Essoyes, in the Champagne region, where she is working on her next book: A Long Way from Iowa: A Literary Memoir.
Adrian Leeds was born and raised in New Orleans. In 1994, she moved to Paris with her family for a one-year “sabbatical” and never left. Her company, the Adrian Leeds Group, provides a full range of property and consultation services for North Americans–– “French Property the American Way.” She is fully committed to helping people realize their dream life in France, and has helped many hundreds of Francophiles to do just that. She is most well-known as the network’s most popular real estate agent on the HGTV series House Hunters International. Since 2001 she has published Nouvellettres® (newsletters) three times a week that are a source of a great deal of practical information about living in France, as well as lively stories about her day-to-day experiences in Paris, Nice and beyond.
Harriet Welty Rochefort grew up in Iowa, bought a one-way ticket to France after graduating from college, and once she got there, never left. She is the author of three nonfiction books about the French: French Toast, French Fried, and Joie de Vivre, all published by St. Martin’s Press. Diane Johnson, author of Le Divorce, called French Toast the “gold standard” of books about the French, and the Los Angeles Times called it “wise and devastatingly funny.” Harriet’s latest book, published in 2020, is Final Transgression, a novel set in France during World War II, based on a true story from her husband’s family. A bi-national, Harriet lives with her husband, Philippe, in Paris. They divide their time between their garden apartment there and their second home in Brittany.
Source: https://afusa.org/event/demystifying-the-french-a-panel-discussion/
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