Spotlight on France - Podcast: Strikes, chasing franglais, code-breaking in Brittany and Nostradamus' predictions

Loading player...
Why the pension reform in France has everyone on edge and is blocking train travel through the holidays. Also, why keeping English out of the French language is more than a matter of words. And the search to unravel a mysterious inscription on a rock in Brittany.

The Academie Française, founded in 1735 to protect the French language, is the butt of many a joke about the French. Some scoffed at a recent communiqué warning officials about their overuse of 'franglais'. But as Sir Michael Edwards, one of the Academy's 40 Immortals, explains, concern over English creeping into French goes deeper than words. It reflects the way we think about the world. (Listen @4'50)

A rock in a bay in Brittany has made the news recently after the local town launched a contest to decipher the writing on it. The inscription is believed to date from the 1700s, and is at least partly in the regional Breton language. We explore the mystery of the rock as part of a look into Brittany's history, language and culture (Listen @16'00)

Michel de Nostredame, aka Nostradamus, was born on 14 (or 15) December 1503, in Provence. He is best known for ‘Les Propheties’, a collection of quatrains that seem to predict the future. Many swear he predicted events like the rise of Hitler or the assassination of JFK. Was he a prophet? (Listen @19'15)

Subscribe to the Spotlight on France podcast on iTunes (link here) or Google podcasts (link here).

 
12 Dec 2019 English South Africa News

Other recent episodes

Podcast: Adapting to heat, France's fitness boom, Paris Mosque at 100

As France's record-breaking heatwave last week raises questions about how the country will have to adapt to a warming climate, we look at what that could mean for French culture. We also explore the country's growing interest in fitness – driven in part by its most popular YouTuber – and…
2 Jul 27 min

Podcast: Grappling with legacies of slavery, French film industry crisis

How two people in the French port city of Nantes – one descended from slave owners, the other from enslaved people – are working together to "repair" the country's troubled history. The slave money that built the Élysée Palace, the French president's official residence. And turmoil in the French film industry…
21 May 32 min

Podcast: French raves, accent insecurity, birth of the Front Populaire

A crackdown on France's unauthorised raves threatens an outlet for young people. How regional accents in France can hold you back. And the Front Populaire, which laid the foundations of France's welfare state. The French government has vowed to crack down on unauthorised raves, known as "free parties", with a…
7 May 36 min