Daily SectionMarker

Misc SectionMarker

Weekly SectionMarker

Weekly SectionMarker

Pakistan's Internet Magazine
Herald
Dawn GroupMarker

Archive, Search, Feedback & HelpMarker

Weather
Dawn Classified



FrontPage National International Local Business KSE Forex Sports Editorial Opinion Letters Features Today's Cartoon PTV 2 Guide Cowasjee Ayaz Mazdak Review Dawn Magazine Young World Images Dawn Group Subscription To Advertise

DINA
Previous Story DAWN - the Internet Edition


19 February 2004 Thursday 27 Zilhaj 1424






Intellectuals condemn French govt

By Jon Henley


PARIS: More than 20,000 French artists, thinkers, film- makers, scientists, lawyers, doctors and academics have signed a petition accusing the centre-right government of "waging war on intelligence" and instituting "a new state anti-intellectualism".

In a campaign bound to inflame passions in France, where penseurs are accorded the kind of respect most countries reserve for their rock stars, the signatories denounced a "coherent policy" to "pauperise and fragilise every field considered ... unproductive, useless or dissident".

Among the better-known names to have signed the document, published in Wednesday's issue of Les Inrockuptibles magazine, are the philosopher Jacques Derrida, film-makers Bertrand Tavernier and Claude Lanzmann, theatre director Ariane Mnouchkine, novelist Marie Darrieusecq, the former Socialist culture minister Jack Lang and Danny Cohn-Bendit, hero of the May 1968 student uprising.

The collected professions "of knowledge, thought and research" are under systematic attack from a state-sponsored philistinism intent on reducing the complexities of Gallic public debate to a series of "simplistic and terrifying" alternatives, the protesters say: "For or against Islamic veils? Left-leaning magistrates or too-tough cops? Artists - are they idlers or profiteers?"

The charge of anti-intellectualism is a highly damaging one in France, whose present-day Left Bank thinkers can draw on a rich tradition that includes the likes of Voltaire, Rousseau and Sartre.

Paris remains one of very few places in the world where postmodern structuralists or relativist post-structural modernists can harbour realistic hopes of making it in television.

Sylvain Bourmeau, a journalist at Les Inrockuptibles and one of the petition's organisers, said that at one stage last week, email signatures were coming in at the rate of 700 an hour. The magazine will publish the first 8,000 names over 17 pages this morning, he said.

"We are aiming to mobilise all those whose work involves some kind of mediation, which in turn demands a detour via comprehension - in other words, all that this government is currently short-circuiting in the name of political and PR efficiency," he added.

Perhaps unwisely, the blokeish prime minister, Jean-Pierre Raffarin, who prides himself on his man-of-the-people touch, has never been shy about confessing his suspicion of thinkers, savaging "those who suppose themselves to be great intellectuals" as recently as last October. His centre-right government has enraged many of France's "intellectual professions" recently.

Moves to regulate the status of psychotherapists provoked the fury of a whole generation of analysts, while fully 40,000 scientists denounced swinging cuts in state funding and the loss of some 550 postgraduate research jobs this year.

Lawyers, meanwhile, are up in arms at a bill passed last week which they say radically extends police and prosecutors' powers at the expense of justice and human rights, while magistrates are seething at the ruling UMP party's public criticism of the sentence handed down recently to its chairman, Alain Juppe. -Dawn/The Guardian News Service.




Previous Story Top of Page

© The DAWN Group of Newspapers, 2004