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The Discovery of France Print E-mail
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Monday, 10 December 2007
By Graham Robb, Picador, 2007
427 pp. soft cover, Village Voice €28, French News price €26

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Imagine a country it takes three weeks to cross north to south, and three weeks east to west; a country split into half-a-dozen languages, over 50 dialects and hundreds of sub-dialects; a country unknown to most of its inhabitants, who are only dimly – and usually unhappily – aware of the existence of a central government that makes its authority felt by sending them labour recruiters, taxcollectors and map makers. (At least one cartographer is hacked to pieces by the suspicious population of a village where the priest, the local chief and a sorcerer or healer represent authority). A Gothic fantasy kingdom? A literary allegory of loneliness, isolation and benightedness such as a Kafka or a Buzzati might have written? No, this was France – and not so long ago either. After writing biographies of Hugo, Balzac, and Rimbaud, Graham Robb, a scholar who combines a lively prose style with a passion for the small, hard facts that tell us more about the lives of ordinary people than the statistics of social historians, has now given us a remarkably well-informed and well-told history of the human geography of France from the ancien régime to the 20th century. This may sound dry, yet though Robb did spend four years doing research for the book in libraries, he also covered some 14,000kms of the French countryside on a bicycle, poking into places that would seem exotic to even the average Frenchman. The discovery in his title is both personal and factual. It has as much to do with where the author went and who he talked to as, for example, the number of pins and bobbins in peddler's backpack.
The story that Robb tells, how France discovered itself physically as distinct from nationally, is by and large one of loss – inevitably so, given that opening up to the rest of the country meant surrendering local particularism. Patois, age-old customs and prejudices died out like candle flames in the bright light of the modern world and its devastating ‘t’s: trains, the telephone, television and tourism. And yet progress is not quite the one-way road it is often assumed to be: local exceptions vanish, only to be replaced by new exceptions.
Where there were once remote mountain villages hostile to outsiders (Robert Louis Stevenson, hardly a paranoiac, packed a pistol during his donkey trek through the Cévennes in 1878), there are now suburbs where few save their own inhabitants dare set foot. And if every French citizen remains attached to the concept of “l'exception française”, President Sarkozy's France is starting to pitch and creak alarmingly as it sails into the choppy waters of increasingly clamorous “exceptionalisms”. Someone ought to send him a copy of this book. There isn't a better – or more readable – guide to why France is the way it is.
 
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