Paris: 'America is Back'
Jordan Stancil : Barack Obama
People here are looking in wonderment at the culture that produced Obama and at the people who put him in the White House. In short, they're looking at us.
Jordan Stancil : Barack Obama
People here are looking in wonderment at the culture that produced Obama and at the people who put him in the White House. In short, they're looking at us.
Marc Perelman
France has by far the most vibrant revolutionary left in Western Europe.
Lorna Scott Fox : Fiction
An English translation of Lydie Salvayre's The Power of Flies demonstrates how this novelist and practicing psychiatrist has earned more nervous respect than love in France.
A mosaic of anecdotes and historical snapshots surveys the sociological diversity of France, past and present.
Laila Lalami : Civil Rights & Liberties
A new book examines headscarf hysteria and the politics of identity in contemporary France.
Alexander Cockburn : Great Britain
On airports Heathrow and De Gaulle, bicycles and trains.
The Surrealist dissident Raymond Queneau turned his writings into a lab for his experiments, and the results are still exhilarating.
Alexander Cockburn : Native Americans
These days, even London and Paris seem a bit like North Korea.
A trilogy of hard-boiled detective novels set in Marseilles contemplates the ethnic turmoil in modern-day France.
A painter explores love and loss in the iconic settings of postwar Paris.
Jordan Stancil : Foreign Leaders & Political Figures
France's new president has launched an assault on the welfare state.
French politics have been pushed to the right thanks in part to the neo-Fascist politician Jean-Marie Le Pen.
Jordan Stancil : Foreign Affairs
A new Reaganomics is taking hold in Europe, with grave implications for progressive politics everywhere.
Ruth Scurr reviews The First Total War, a study of Napoleonic France that illuminates the causes of all-out war.
K.A. Dilday : Corporate Media & Consolidation
Beset with financial woes, a labor-management power struggle and an aging leftist readership, the legendary French newspaper is on the brink of extinction.
The history of twentieth-century France depicts a struggle between the republican ideal of a unitary state and the shifting concerns of a pluralistic society.
Michel Houellebecq's The Possibility of an Island has at last landed on American shores, along with Pierre Mérot's Mammals.
Two new books on the French Revolution examine Robespierre's role in advocating terror as an instrument of government, raising compelling questions about state-sponsored terror in our own time.
Young rebels in France are fighting not for change but for the same rights their parents tried to secure during the 1968 student revolution.
Françoise Mouly : Migration & Immigration
As media attention focused on rampaging youths setting afire the poor suburbs of France, verbal conflagrations raged among politicians and elected officials on how to respond to the threat.
Doug Ireland : Migration & Immigration
Fires and rioting in France are the result of thirty years of government neglect and the failure of the French political classes to make any serious effort to integrate Muslim and black populations into the French economy and culture.
Harry Braverman : Nation History
As hundreds of riots rock the cities and towns of France, the government imposed a curfew Tuesday and the French tried to make sense of the random attacks and acts of arson erupting all over the country. France has not seen such "civil unrest" since 1968, when students occupied the Sorbonne and spilled out into the Latin Quarter to push for university reform and protest the liberal establishment. The students launched nationwide labor strikes, and hundreds of students and police officers were hospitalized.
Richard Alba & Nancy Foner : Islam & Muslims
With religious school vouchers and public displays of the Ten
Commandments on government monuments, the United States is following Europe's path to a melding of Christianity and the state. That's no way to instill
loyalty among Islamic immigrants.
Voters in France and the Netherlands were right to reject the European Constitution.

