Brian Holmes on Sun, 9 Dec 2018 21:12:13 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> Christophe Guilluy: France is deeply fractured. Gilets jaunes are just a symptom (Guardian) |
Aloha,
Below Guilly's op-ed, links to two other Guardian features worth looking
at, today's The Observer's analysis of the Gillets Jaunes movement, and
a sum-up of the interview with Daniel Cohn-Bendit ("we wanted to oust a
general, they want a general in power") which nicely illustrates the
disarray of ertswhile leftists who've seen 'the Revolution' switching
sides ... in their eyes.
Enyvej, (i) the gillets jaunes movement will, immo, petter out in the
end, and the soon to come final showdown will not be that of the people,
but that of nature.
Cheers all the same, p+2D!
------------
original to:
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/dec/02/france-is-deeply-fractured-gilets-jeunes-just-a-symptom
France is deeply fractured. Gilets jaunes are just a symptom
by Christophe Guilluy, The Guardian/The Observer, Sun 2 Dec 2018.
The author of a seminal account of French society charts widening
cultural divisions
From the 1980s onwards, it was clear there was a price to be paid for
western societies adapting to a new economic model and that price was
sacrificing the European and American working class. No one thought the
fallout would hit the bedrock of the lower-middle class, too. It’s
obvious now, however, that the new model not only weakened the fringes
of the proletariat but society as a whole.
The paradox is this is not a result of the failure of the globalised
economic model but of its success. In recent decades, the French
economy, like the European and US economies, has continued to create
wealth. We are thus, on average, richer. The problem is at the same time
unemployment, insecurity and poverty have also increased. The central
question, therefore, is not whether a globalised economy is efficient,
but what to do with this model when it fails to create and nurture a
coherent society?
In France, as in all western countries, we have gone in a few decades
from a system that economically, politically and culturally integrates
the majority into an unequal society that, by creating ever more wealth,
benefits only the already wealthy.
The change is not down to a conspiracy, a wish to cast aside the poor,
but to a model where employment is increasingly polarised. This comes
with a new social geography: employment and wealth have become more and
more concentrated in the big cities. The deindustrialised regions, rural
areas, small and medium-size towns are less and less dynamic. But it is
in these places – in “peripheral France” (one could also talk of
peripheral America or peripheral Britain) – that many working-class
people live. Thus, for the first time, “workers” no longer live in areas
where employment is created, giving rise to a social and cultural shock.
'Workers' no longer live in areas where employment is created, giving
rise to a social and cultural shock
It is in this France périphérique that the gilets jaunes movement was
born. It is also in these peripheral regions that the western populist
wave has its source. Peripheral America brought Trump to the White
House. Peripheral Italy – mezzogiorno, rural areas and small northern
industrial towns – is the source of its populist wave. This protest is
carried out by the classes who, in days gone by, were once the key
reference point for a political and intellectual world that has
forgotten them.
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So if the hike in the price of fuel triggered the yellow vest movement,
it was not the root cause. The anger runs deeper, the result of an
economic and cultural relegation that began in the 80s. At the same
time, economic and land logics have locked up the elite world. This
confinement is not only geographical but also intellectual. The
globalised metropolises are the new citadels of the 21st century – rich
and unequal, where even the former lower-middle class no longer has a
place. Instead, large global cities work on a dual dynamic:
gentrification and immigration. This is the paradox: the open society
results in a world increasingly closed to the majority of working
people.
The economic divide between peripheral France and the metropolises
illustrates the separation of an elite and its popular hinterland.
Western elites have gradually forgotten a people they no longer see. The
impact of the gilets jaunes, and their support in public opinion (eight
out of 10 French people approve of their actions), has amazed
politicians, trade unions and academics, as if they have discovered a
new tribe in the Amazon.
France’s ‘gilets jaunes’ leave Macron feeling decidedly off-colour
Read more
The point, remember, of the gilet jaune is to ensure its wearer is
visible on the road. And whatever the outcome of this conflict, the
gilets jaunes have won in terms of what really counts: the war of
cultural representation. Working-class and lower middle-class people are
visible again and, alongside them, the places where they live.
Their need in the first instance is to be respected, to no longer be
thought of as “deplorable”. Michael Sandel is right when he points out
the inability of the elites to take the aspirations of the poorest
seriously. These aspirations are simple: the preservation of their
social and cultural capital and work. For this to be successful we must
end the elite “secession” and adapt the political offers of left and
right to their demands. This cultural revolution is a democratic and
societal imperative – no system can remain if it does not integrate the
majority of its poorest citizens.
Christophe Guilluy is the author of Twilight of the Elites: Prosperity,
Periphery and the Future of France
---------
The Observer's view:
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/dec/09/the-observer-view-on-the-french-protests-observer-editorial
Cohn-Bendit interview:
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/dec/08/daniel-cohn-bendit-gilets-jaunes-macron-may-68-paris-student-protest
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