Showing posts with label french culture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label french culture. Show all posts

Monday, 21 September 2009

French and German dairy farmers crying over spilt milk?

Protesting the price of daily products in Europe, French and German farmers have been dumping tens of thousands of gallons of milk. The demonstration on Saturday added intensity to a week-long strike — where dairy producers have refused to deliver milk.

The French and German farmers are trying to pressure the European Union into overhauling regulation of the dairy market. At the European Bridge — which spans the border of France and Germany — farmers poured urns of milk into the Rhine.

One protesting French farmer commented "You can see that there are French farmers and German farmers who are in the same hole with the same problems, and I think that from tomorrow it won't just be Germany and France, there will also be a strike in other European countries."

The protesting farmers then drove their tractors across the bridge and into Germany — where they sprayed tanks of milk over open fields.

"We are doing this because of the European connections. The two biggest milk producers in Europe are France and Germany, and we are working together and we have the same problems as each other and as the rest of Europe." a German farmer said.

The farmers are calling on the European Union to cut their milk quotas. The European Union plans to end milk quotas by 2015.

Tuesday, 15 September 2009

French culture - FranceExpress in Korea

The new French ambassador to Korea aims to bring a personal touch to the French cultural extravaganza known as FranceExpress.

This year, the festival will run for four months during which time Ambassador Elisabeth Laurin assures that everyone will be treated to some spectacular, world-class French talent.

"To know about a country you have to know its people, its history, its sentiments," said Laurin. "One of the best ways to do that is through a country's arts."

Before coming to Korea a few weeks ago, Laurin was curious to know more about Korea, not its political situation which she can easily find out through the media and the French foreign ministry, but about its people and culture.

She did not have to go far in Paris to find a wealth of Korean culture. The future ambassador to Korea at the time not only discovered traditional performances but also more avant-garde or contemporary Korean art such as innovative design, films and literature. As well, there has been a big surge in recent years to translate Korean literature into French, thus bringing a whole new world to France.

Laure Coudret-Laut, cultural counselor and director of the French Cultural Center explained that there will be more than 40 events at this year's FranceExpress.

The festival will run between September and December and will offer musical performances, exhibitions, theatrical works and films.

"We will have more theater this year than in the past," said Coudret-Laut. "In total, 200 French artists will come to Korea for this festival."

To give the festival a Korean touch, actress Kim A-joong was appointed as the goodwill ambassador for FranceExpress 2009.

The festival will begin with a series of events called "Platform Seoul" with art exhibitions showcasing the works of Christian Boltanski, Vincent Ganivet, Alain Declercq, Elise Florenty and Thu Van Tran. These exhibitions will be shown at the Kimusa, which is the building that formerly housed the Defense Security Command.

A tribute exhibition dedicated to designer and architect Jean Prouve will take place at the Daelim Contemporary Art Museum from Friday until Nov. 29.

If that isn't enough French art, then check out the Georges Rouault exhibition which will showcase 160 of his works from the collections of Paris' renowned Centre Georges Pompidou. The exhibition will run from Dec. 16 until March 28 at the Hangaram Museum.

No festival celebrating French culture would be complete without a film festival, and the embassy has lined up eight different film events.

One highlight of the film aspect of FranceExpress will be the French film night at the Pusan International Film Festival in October.

Tuesday, 8 September 2009

French kissing goodbye to 'la bise'

It's a ubiquitous French tradition, as familiar as a baguette or an espresso at the neighborhood cafe. Now, "la bise," the cheek-to-cheek peck that the French use to say hello or goodbye, has come under pressure from a globalized threat: swine flu.

Some French schools, companies and a Health Ministry hotline are telling students and employees to avoid the social ritual out of fear the pandemic could make it the kiss of death, or at least illness, as winter approaches.

Mainland France has so far only counted three swine flu deaths. The tally is worse in French southern hemisphere holdings now in winter, like the South Pacific island of Nouvelle Caledonie, with seven deaths and 35,000 cases overall, according to local officials.

Across France, authorities and school officials are taking few chances — while trying to avoid stirring panic when the academic year started last week. In recent months, a few schools in France have been temporarily shut after cases of swine flu emerged.

For kids in two schools in the town of Guilvinec, in France's western Brittany region, the first lesson of the year came from local officials: no more cheek kisses to teachers or other students.

"I asked the children not to kiss anymore," town mayor Helene Tanguy said by phone. "I felt that the protections sought — to wash hands regularly, not throw used handkerchiefs around, and not cough any old way — had no meaning if we let the kids keep kissing."

"It seems we were the first town to do so," she said. It's just part of an effort to adopt new and more sanitary habits, and there's no punishment involved for those who do exchange bises, she added.

As a playful alternative, some teachers in the town have set up "bise boxes": Pupils slip heart-shaped greetings inside before they're exchanged in class, Tanguy said.

Many in France see a threat to cherished customs.

"Swine flu has already changed our life," read the headline of an article in Monday's Le Parisien about banning the bise.

The national government isn't calling for a ban. But the French Health Ministry, on its swine flu phone hotline, recommends that people avoid "close contact — including shaking hands and giving the bise."

Wednesday, 2 September 2009

French Trader gets Trial Reprieve

Jérôme Kerviel, the French trader who is accused of orchestrating a huge trading scandal at Société Générale, won a last-minute reprieve on Tuesday after an order sending him to trial was frozen by France’s highest appeals court.

French bank Société Générale said in January 2008 that it had lost 4.9 billion euros ($6.4 billion) after more than $70 billion in unauthorized bets were placed on derivatives just as the market turned.

The loss was more than double the lender’s 2008 net income, and pushed it to undertake a 5.5 billion euro rights offer to restore its capital. France’s Banking Commission fined the bank 4 million euros in July 2008 for internal control failures related to the loss.

Mr. Kerviel faces as much as five years in prison and a fine of 375,000 euros if found guilty of causing the losses.

Monday, 10 August 2009

French star Deneuve booed at Italy performance

French actress Catherine Deneuve was booed during a stage performance in Italy by people demanding a refund.

Deneuve, 65, and Italian actor Michele Placido performed a reading in French and Italian at the cultural festival in Marina di Pietrasanta, Tuscany, which was greeted by whistles and boos.

Police had to intervene to calm down about 200 people shouting, "Thieves. We want our money back,". Organizers responded by offering free tickets to another show at the La Versiliana festival as compensation.

Deneuve declined to comment, while Placido, who also is a director, downplayed Wednesday's incident.

"These things happen," he told SkyTg24 TV channel. Placido also suggested it might have been "a mistake" to have Deneuve read her part in French without subtitles.

The two actors performed a reading from George Perec's book "Je me souviens" (I Remember) — a recollection of memories from postwar decades accompanied by music.

Deneuve was nominated for an Oscar for her role in 1992's "Indochine."

Wednesday, 13 May 2009

Major French Wine Regions

Bit of geography lesson today. One of the predominant reasons that France has the good fortune to be so good at producing fine wines is her geography and geology. This is a country which has many large regions which are blessed with a nice balance between not too much heat and too little and too much rain and too little. In part this is probably why France is also such a popular place to visit.

The result is that French grapes are given time to achieve their best and once it comes to vintage time most of the major wine areas of France are sufficiently cool to allow the wines to ferment in a controlled but natural way without the need to resort to artificial techniques that are more common in regions such as Spain and the USA.

So where are the main wine regions of France? The answer is thus:

Bordeaux (South West of France just off the coast)

Loire Valley ( A huge area for wine in France stretching from Nantes on the west coast to

Orleans and Bourges in the middle of the country and as far south as St Etienne )

Champagne ( A smallish region to the east of Paris including Reims and Epernay)

Lorraine ( Another small region on the French German border around Metz )

Alsace ( Just south of Lorraine and further to the east )

Jura ( Again a small region in the east of the country near the Swiss border and directly above Savoie )

Burgundy

Savoie and Bugey ( One of my personal favourites due to my love of the French Alps and my passion for skiing. In my opinion there’s nothing better in this world than the sun of your face high in the mountains with a glass of wine in hand )

Rhone Valley ( South East of the country around Orange, Avignon and Valence )

Provence ( Here we are around Nice, Marseille, St Tropez and Toulon on the South East coast of france and the surrounding hills.)

Corsica

Languedoc-Roussillon ( To the west of Provence on the south coast )

South West ( This is actually a really big region which sits between the Spanish border in the south, Bordeaux and the Loire Valley to the north and the Rhone Valley and Languedoc-Roussillon to the east. )

Till next time…