Culture Chronicle
D.I.Y. Culture
The New York Times - April 14, 2010
By Michael Kimmelman
It wasn't so many years ago that Europeans loved to moan about American culture overrunning homegrown art forms. In the 1990s and early 2000s some in Europe were arguing for regulatory barriers to hold off the New World barbarians, particularly from Hollywood. In France, President Jacques Chirac's culture minister, Jacques Toubon, warned about how the United States entertainment industry was trying "to impose domination by any means," and Régis Debray, among other French intellectuals to hop on the same bandwagon, predicted that "the American empire will pass, like the others.
"Let's at least make sure," Mr. Debray continued, "it does not leave irreparable damage to our creative abilities behind it."
That was then. The other day President Nicolas Sarkozy was reiterating the virtues of what the French call "l'exception culturelle," a modern policy of government protection and promotion of French culture, particularly the film industry. Mr. Sarkozy's poll numbers have been plummeting, and l'exception culturelle feeds into his current strategy to identify himself with whatever, in the midst of an increasingly diversified, fractious and disapproving French society, French people say makes France French. For the full article, click here
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