Every month in France-Amérique, discover the best of French and Francophone culture in the United States.

Analysis of French-American news • French cultural events in the United States • Interviews with leading intellectuals • Fashion tips • Traditional and contemporary recipes • Reports from across the United States • Authors’ perspectives on America • Portraits of artists, entrepreneurs, and other French-American personalities • The best of Francophone literature translated into English • French movies and series in theaters and online • French habits and linguistic subtleties • Unique places to visit in France • And so much more…

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December 2020

Discover our selection of gifts to treat your Francophile relatives and friends during the holiday season! This month, we also explore the historical roots of Parisian clichés with the show Emily in Pariswe take a look at the portrayal of the French Revolution in cinema with American historian David Bell, and we shine some light on Adrienne Fidelin, “Man Ray’s forgotten muse.”

Featured Articles

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LIFESTYLE

THE MUSÉE DU GRAND SIÈCLE

The Glory of France’s Golden Age

Nestled in Saint-Cloud, in the Seine Valley near Versailles, this new museum will showcase the exceptional artistic creativity during the reign of Louis XIV and is set to open in 2025.

CULTURE

ADRIENNE FIDELIN

Man Ray’s Forgotten Muse

He called her his “little black sun.” Born in Guadeloupe, Adrienne Fidelin was the American artist’s partner in Paris before World War II tore them apart. She appears in almost 400 of the renowned artist’s photographs, and in 1937 became the first Black model to be featured in a leading U.S. fashion magazine. However, she was pushed to the sidelines of history.

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CULTURE

RAYMOND DEPARDON

Rural Portraits

Photographer Raymond Depardon traveled up and down rural France to meet farming communities until 2015. A gentle immersion in country life.

CULTURE

GEORGES CLEMENCEAU

An Epistolarian in America

George Clemenceau was two-time president of the council, minister of the interior, and minister of war. He worked as a correspondent in New York for French daily Le Temps from 1865 through 1869, and became a shrewd observer of American politics during the post-Civil War Reconstruction era. His “Lettres d’Amérique” have been a reference for U.S. historians since they were translated in 1928, and have just been published as a comprehensive volume in France.

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Table of contents

NEWS

Liberté, Fraternité, Laïcité: Why the Murder of a Schoolteacher Has Shocked the Nation. By Anthony Bulger

FRENCH GIFTS

Eight Seasonal Gifts for the Francophiles in Your Life. By Tracy Kendrick

IDEAS

Editorial: Resilient Democracy. By Guy Sorman

La Révolution: Netflix Guillotines French History. By Guénola Pellen

David Bell: “Conservatives See the French Revolution as ‘Totalitarian,’ While the Socialist Left Still Admires It.” By Guy Sorman

Three Questions for Emmanuel de Boisset. By Guénola Pellen

FASHION

The Gentleman’s Style: Fashion by the Fire. By Julien Scavini

LIFESTYLE

The Musée du Grand Siècle: The Glory of France’s Golden Age. By Jean-Gabriel Fredet

BON APPETIT

Four Weeks That Shook American Gastronomy. By Clément Thiery

CULTURE

Adrienne Fidelin: Man Ray’s Forgotten Muse. By Clément Thiery

Raymond Depardon: Rural Portraits. By Jonas Cuénin

Georges Clemenceau: An Epistolarian in America. By Sophie Joubert

Abdellah Taïa: Listening to the Voices of Exile. By Sophie Joubert

LANGUAGE

The Observer: An American in an American Paris: Why the Clichés Live On. By Anthony Bulger

The Wordsmith: Calembours, anagrammes, palindromes… By Dominique Mataillet

UNKNOWN FRANCE

A Day Trip to Nancy. By Gabriel Bertrand

© Library of Congress

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