French President Emmanuel Macron looked to cement his legacy, and take on political opponents, with the inauguration on Monday of a monument to the French language deep in far-right heartland.


Macron used the occasion to wade into a culture war debate, backing a right-wing bill to ban the use of “inclusive language” – a popular trend for using both masculine and feminine versions of words when writing.

France must “not give in to fashionable trends,” he said as he inaugurated the Cite Internationale de la Langue Francaise just hours before the Senate was due to debate the proposed law.

Modern French presidents love a cultural “grand projet” – an imposing monument to “scratch” their name on history, as ex-leader Francois Mitterrand put it in the 1980s.

Mitterrand was an avid and controversial legacy-builder, transforming the Louvre museum with a glass pyramid, and erecting the vast Opera Bastille and National Library.

Georges Pompidou built a famous modern art museum in Paris, and Jacques Chirac created the Quai Branly global culture museum on the banks of the Seine.

The practice fell out of fashion this century, but has been revived by Macron, who was already eyeing up a crumbling chateau in the small town of Villers-Cotterets while still a presidential candidate in 2017.

He has overseen the renovation of the Renaissance castle, completed in 1539 under King Francois I, and its transformation into an international centre for the French language.

It hopes to attract 200,000 visitors a year to its large library (replete with AI-supported suggestion engine), interactive exhibits and cultural events.

Perhaps fittingly, the website seems determinedly uninterested in the quality of its English translations, describing the castle as a “high place of the French history and architecture”.

read more: https://www.france24.com/en/live-news/20231030-macron-opposes-gender-neutral-writing-as-he-opens-language-museum

    • Psychodelic@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Is this like Americans using Latinx? Cause that shit’s dumb af and infuriates Spanish-speaking Americans on the daily.

      I’m very left-leaning but I’m absolutely conservative when it comes to changing your language just to appease people that don’t even speak it

      • micka190@lemmy.world
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        Very different. In French, you often simply need to add a letter or two at the end of a male-gendered word to make it female-gendered. A lot of our media simply does something like “word(e)”, with the contents of the parenthesis being the additional letters to make a word female-gendered. That way, you can avoid typing mostly the same word twice.

        We’ve been doing this for decades, and is absolutely not a new “woke trend” or whatever bullshit Macron seems to believe it is.

        “Latinx” was a stupid trend by white Americans to try and bastardized how a language works.

    • hansl@lemmy.world
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      Etymology is fascinating and your lack of imagination as to why is preventing you from enjoying (or letting people enjoy) things.

    • Mr_Blott@lemmy.world
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      The very word “Language” comes from the French for “tongue”. About a third of the words you use in everyday speech are French. You’d have to be a bit of an ignoramus to not find that interesting

  • Dieguito 🦝@feddit.it
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    Just curious: how do they manage with their spelling and their phonetics to achieve gender neutrality?

    In the article they refer to just

    a popular trend for using both masculine and feminine versions of words when writing

    which would be as common sense as every speach beginning with the “ladies and gentlemen” clause. Are they going to remove the “ladies” part because it’s redundant?

    • DaDragon@kbin.social
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      The issue, I’d assume, is that you end up replacing generic masculine words with two words. ‘Dear bakers and female-bakers’ for example. When the more logical approach is to simply turn the generic masculine into the generic it’s being used as anyway. In English, for example, a fireman or policeman does not need to be male, and it suffices to say ‘he is a fireman, she is a fireman’.

      • optissima@possumpat.io
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        When the more logical approach is to simply turn the generic masculine into the generic it’s being used as anyway.

        That’s still causing the issue of “man as the default,” now it’s just “we consider women men too.” The more logical way would be to use language akin to “firefighter,” “officer,” or “pig,” all naturally neutral words.

          • gregorum@lemm.ee
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            Yeah, well, “they” was exclusively a plural pronoun in English until some people started using it in the singular as a gender-neutral pronoun, and everyone eventually got over it. Well, most everyone.

            Languages evolve. I realize this example isn’t as complicated as what is required for using gender-inclusive language in a romance language, but my point remains valid.

              • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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                Different language, but I’ve seen some interesting experimental Latine gender neutral verbage. Instead of a/o they just use e.

                It definitely requires a fundamental change to language, though, and I don’t know if it can ever take off. Maybe as its own dialect?

                • optissima@possumpat.io
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                  It absolutely can be integrated into the language, it will just sound “weird” for a bit, as it’s taking advantage of an underused, but already existing, part of the language.

          • optissima@possumpat.io
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            This is not true, as Latin itself carries a neuter form for nouns. Sure, you’d have to gender of the noun, but it has existed for literally 2000 years.

        • broface@lemm.ee
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          Really?

          Why is it man is the default and not human? ‘Man’ exists in both ‘man, woman, and human.’ Why even assume the default is male when talking about a fireman? (aside from the fact firemen have historically been male)

      • fiveoar@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        Another option is like in German where you invent some sort of new suffix like “*in”. For example, Lehrer (m), Lerhrerin (w), Lehrer*in (m/w/d). Prounounced as a sort of shorter than space silence.

        • barsoap@lemm.ee
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          That’s a terrible solution, there’s no pronouns and articles that could refer back to that kind of construct (“The teachers who went to the bridge met their students there”), and don’t get me started on cases or adjective agreement.

          If you don’t want to use generic feminine/masculine forms (Like “Die Person löste ein Bahnticket”, “Der Bäcker buk ein Brot”) there’s the Inklusivum, which is nothing but a whole new fourth grammatical gender: Animated but sex-neutral.

          • rimjob_rainer@discuss.tchncs.de
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            Inklusivum

            Wow this is bullshit. Who’s gonna learn a whole new grammar for their mother tongue? And “de gute Arzte” still sounds masculine to me. There’s nothing wrong with generic masculine in my opinion, it’s efficient and everyone speaks it. But I’m a man, so my opinion is invalid anyway.

            • barsoap@lemm.ee
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              Who’s gonna learn a whole new grammar for their mother tongue?

              It’s not a new grammar it’s a new gender and the difference to what we have isn’t larger than German inter-dialectal difference. It’s a linguistically sane alternative to Binnen-I and Sternchen and everything.

              As in: If there was a dialect around without male/female distinction that used the Inklusivum instead you’d hardly blink. You’d be able to make sense of it (at least more than I can make sense of Bavarian) and with some exposure, you would be able to speak it without studying.

              You could also learn Platt which pretty much has lost the female/male distinction everywhere but in pronouns just like English (but retains the neuter), but I guarantee you that’d be harder.

    • Balinares@pawb.social
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      No.

      The French have started using new typographic conventions to turn nouns and adjectives neutral, or at least dual-gendered. French is a deeply gendered language by default, so for instance the word for author is “auteur” if the author is male and “autrice” if the author is female. If unknown, then… The author is assumed male.

      This is of course not great, and so the French people have started using constructions like “auteur.ice” or somesuch in order to include both options in the word. This approach appears to have become reasonably popular.

      The French right wing is EXTREMELY upset about this and is seeking to get it outright banned (they may already have succeeded actually).

      As far as I understand this museum is the brainchild of the fascist party RN and is entirely about the French language as the right wing thinks it should be spoken, as opposed to how it actually is. So, just yet another instance of taxpayer-funded reactionary crap.

      • micka190@lemmy.world
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        The French have started using new typographic conventions

        We’ve been doing the whole “auteur(ice)” thing for decades already. It’s not new. For as long as I can remember, every technical/educational book I’ve ever read in school did this.

      • doricub@lemmy.world
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        Without knowing much, I feel like it runs into the same problem as Latinx. It is unintuitive to speak the words how they are written. The specific auteur.ice example seems relatively easy to actually speak, but I’m sure other words run into the same problems.

        • glacier@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          Latinx is a word invented by white Americans to describe people from Latin America. But this is about French people using their own language in a new way.

          • b0son@lemmy.world
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            No latinx is also a language reform movement in Latin America which targets spoken and written Spanish.

            • PowerCrazy@lemmy.ml
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              People who know better use “latine.” latinx is strictly (white) people on the internet who want to be divisive and use a society’s natural inclusivity as a cudgel for their own ends.

            • broface@lemm.ee
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              Really?

              I guess it depends on what you consider to be a ‘movement.’

    • Abraxiel [any]@hexbear.net
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      “Inclusive” writing involves writing both masculine and feminine forms of words, separated by dots – for example “francais.e.s”.

      The proposed law being debated by the Senate later Monday would ban such phrasing in education and all official texts, from work contracts to court documents to instruction manuals.

      Macron appeared supportive, saying: “In this language, the neutral form is provided by the masculine. We don’t need to add dots in the middle of words to make it better understood.”

  • Nonameuser678@aussie.zone
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    This is the country that gave us existential and post-structural philosophy. What kind of culture war bullshit is going down in France right now?

  • azertyfun@sh.itjust.works
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    Macron is a clown and his opinions on language don’t matter.

    With that out of the way, grammatical gender in French is a really complex topic.

    “Inclusive” language is centuries old through the usage of parenthesis or slashes. Somewhat recently, attempts have been made to codify this practice using a new syntax (auteur·ice), which conservatives aren’t on board with (either because they don’t want change, or because they can pretend it’s a new cultural import from the US and wage some invented culture war).
    Progressives aren’t universally on board either. The new syntax is quite clunky, doesn’t translate to spoken speech, is quite inaccessible to dyslexic people, and completely exclusive of genders outside the binary.

    This is all complicated by the fact that French is a very rigid language whose rules are practically set by the “French Academy” (which is a whole other can of conservative worms) which unfortunately gives old curmudgeons immense power to strike down any evolution of the language as “officially improper”. Imagine if the Oxford Style Guide or whatever was uniformly taught throughout the English speaking world, and from Mumbai to London to Auckland any step away from these rules at school would get you points deducted, and all administrations were forced by law to follow these rules. Then imagine that it’d been that way for longer than anyone’s been alive. That’s the world the French live in, and the very concept of written language being “alive” is fundamentally something most people either disagree with outright or at least look at with suspicion or a vague look of incomprehension.

    • PowerCrazy@lemmy.ml
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      Also literally everyone who speaks a “gendered” language. Fireman isn’t gendered term you dumbass.