Student News

Face-to-Face with French Culture

Recently, students in Stephen Shapiro鈥檚 and courses had the opportunity to meet with French filmmaker Alice Diop, whose documentary Towards Tenderness won the 2017 C脡SAR award for Best Short Film.

Towards Tenderness male feelings about romantic relationships set against the banlieues of France. The film cuts across socioeconomic, racial, and sexual categories to give voice to marginalized perspectives on masculinity.

鈥淭ypically, straight individuals are the focus of this subject, but I liked how the film talked about one of the men who was gay. It was nice to see this representation,鈥 said Karen Ng 鈥22.

鈥淭here鈥檚 an underrepresentation in film of people who are not white, who don鈥檛 fit the stereotypical French image people have,鈥 said Sitashma Parajuli 鈥21. 鈥淎lice was so incredible in capturing how love is affected by social class and why it is represented the way it is in other media. It was eye-opening for those of us who haven't seen that otherwise.鈥

Alice Diop in conversation with students
Alice Diop in conversation with students

The group鈥檚 conversation with Diop was held in French, which provided a challenge for students at various levels.

鈥淎lice is a native French speaker, and I鈥檓 still training my ear,鈥 said Tula Goodman 鈥22. 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 a great experience to speak face-to-face like that; there鈥檚 a real intimacy that鈥檚 different than when you鈥檙e in the classroom, where everyone is coming from different backgrounds of learning the language.鈥

鈥淭hese discussions are a good opportunity to find where we stand in our language acquisition. You go, 鈥極h wait, I understand half the things they鈥檙e saying, and that鈥檚 incredible!鈥,鈥 said Parajuli. 鈥淚n class, we鈥檙e all learning together, so when someone who鈥檚 a native speaker comes, it gives us a good understanding of where we all stand and how we鈥檝e progressed.鈥

For students at Bennington, studying another language also provides a way to reflect upon and engage with the political and social issues influencing those cultures.

Language courses emphasize content and complex discussions alongside vocabulary acquisition, and classroom work is supplemented with interdisciplinary Language Series events that offer a perspective beyond the classroom.

Studying French language through this real-life perspective connects students to contemporary French society in ways that make the culture鈥檚 needs and problems seem as tangible and urgent as their own.

鈥淎 point Alice made is that the understanding of masculinity is a problem everywhere, not just in France,鈥 said Aleyah Austin 鈥20. 鈥淚n taking this language course, I鈥檝e found it helps me understand the state of certain situations within the United States as well; the comparison is helpful. It doesn鈥檛 always feel like I鈥檓 studying this external, faraway place. It鈥檚 like studying what鈥檚 happening here.鈥

Throughout their time at Bennington, many students take courses in multiple languages, widening the cultural perspectives from which their studies can draw.

鈥淚鈥檓 interested in migration, particularly forced migration, and language is a huge part of the integration process,鈥 said Hafsa Zulfiqar 鈥22. 鈥淟anguage plays a role in both integrating people who are migrating and also excluding them when they don鈥檛 know the same language. It鈥檚 interesting how language plays a role in both cases.鈥

鈥淚 study anthropology, and we always come back to cultural relativism, where you look at the culture through its own lens instead of your personal bias. Language is a huge step in cultural relativism because it allows you that space to see culture through the language,鈥 said Parajuli. 鈥淚f I pursue a career in anthropology, I鈥檒l have that stepping stone to understanding cultures as they are.鈥

Related Events

Three people seated in auditorium
From left: Dumas, Casey, Soumahoro

During Fall 2018, students joined French rap artist Casey and Maboula Soumahoro, professor of African-American Studies at Universit茅 de Tours, France, for Black French Matters, a discussion in English. Antoine Dumas 鈥20 served as the French-to-English interpreter for Casey.

鈥淚t was great to talk to Casey and Maboula because they gave insight to French culture that goes beyond a textbook,鈥 said Zulfiqar. 鈥淪ome people assume French culture is homogeneous, but speaking with people like Casey shows the difference between how a culture looks from a bird鈥檚 eye view versus the perspective of individuals.鈥

Silhouette of Casey play video
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Places Gratuites - Casey

Police Report
Eighteenth-century police report

Students also enjoyed the Fall 2018 event Tracking Same-Sex Relations in Eighteenth-Century Paris, a presentation by Jeffrey Merrick, Professor Emeritus at University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Merrick researched eighteenth-century gay culture鈥攊llegal in France at the time鈥攂y piecing together a history drawn from police reports.

鈥淚t was interesting to see French society portrayed through historical texts,鈥 said Bailey Kushinsky 鈥19. 鈥淭he materials you get through textbooks are seen through the lens of grammar and geared toward specific material we鈥檙e trying to learn. The Language Series is useful because it gives real-world perspectives outside of that.鈥

Upcoming Events

The Language Series continues this spring with a testimony by three Bennington students who studied Chinese abroad, an Italian documentary screening and director Q&A, a scholar's discussion on Mexican poet Rosario Castellanos, and a presentation by Dom茅nica Monta帽o-Moncayo '20 about violence against women and their protection in Ecuador.  

 

By Natalie Redmond, Associate Writer