A Point of View: Sex and the French
Press
reports about the French president's complicated love life highlight
the difference between Anglo-Saxon and Gallic attitudes towards sex,
adultery, but above all appetite, writes Adam Gopnik.
Whenever a French man of state has sex with someone not his
wife, people call me up and ask why he did it. When I say people do, I
really mean journalists (a sub-species whose personhood is sometimes in
doubt) and I suppose I really mean newspaper editors and radio producers
(a still more dubious class). But they do call, and they do ask. This
is simply because I lived in France for some years and have written a
lot about life there, and the false assumption is made that I am
intimately expert on all its corners, including those obscure from my
view. This is a version of the popular journalist's "fallacy of
omniscience by proximity". I'm sure that anyone who ever wrote from
Korea gets similar calls: "You lived there, right? You must have often
seen out-of-favour relatives being eaten alive by ravenous dogs? Can't
you tell our listeners something about it?"So, though I know nothing, or damn little, of the specific habits and sex acts of French presidents (when a French statesman thinks of having illicit love, his next thought is not "I must call Gopnik to share my feelings and get his view") still, I do have a view about President Hollande's recent activities, and his supposed tryst with the actor Julie Gayet.
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Find out more
- A Point of View is usually broadcast on Fridays on Radio 4 at 20:50 GMT and repeated Sundays, 08:50 GMT
- Adam Gopnik is an American commentator and writes for The New Yorker
In this instance, of course, this
is a case of a man having sex with someone not his wife because he had,
in fact, no wife not to be faithful to (if that makes Parisian sense),
only a series of apparently increasingly embittered partners and some
kids. As I say, I claim no expertise about it, but I do have a view on
it, and it is a double one that I shall inexpertly but passionately, if
not illicitly, unpack for you now. And that is that the good French
principle of a right to privacy against all comers, is not quite the
same thing as a right to pleasure before all else.
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"France is not a puritanical society - it accepts that human appetites for sex and food are normal”
Nothing could be more
illustrative of this than the tone of outraged indignation directed by
British tabloid journalists at their reluctant French press equivalents
in the past week. "What is it with these people?" the Brit journalists
keep saying, speaking of the French ones. "Why do they refuse to invade
the privacy of someone they've never met, or hang around all night to
grab a few illicit pictures,
causing immense pain to some stranger's
wife and children, in order to obsess over a sexual affair of a kind
they wish they were having themselves? And they call themselves
journalists!"
But in truth, puritanical societies are less morally alert, because the puritanical societies have the judgments pre-packaged and their hypocrisies, too. In France however, the moral rights and wrongs, I've learned, are adjudicated case-by-case. I recall a Parisian woman whose husband was ill but whose lover had a stroke - which, she wondered, demanded her attention more? The circumstance might have seemed absurd, but the reasoning was anything but amoral. Indeed, the French movie director Eric Rohmer's great films are called "moral tales" exactly because they are all about the unsettled nature of desire - about whether, say, the sight of a teenage girl's knee on the beach is worth cancelling a wedding over. Morality may be permanent, but sexual ethics among adults are situational - they depend on this knee at this moment on this beach, and on all the other knees nearby. The people so engaged have to think morally, rather than just pantomiming its practice, as we Anglo-Saxons (a term that in French usage includes New York Jews and London Muslims) do.
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Claire's Knee
- Le Genou de Claire was 1970 film by acclaimed French director Eric Rohmer (pictured)
- Tells the story of French diplomat Jerome who is infatuated by teenager Clare, and develops desire to touch her knee
- Film was fifth in a series of Rohmer's six "moral tales" and won several international awards
But - and there was bound to be a
but - to be a leader, a man or woman of state, does involve questions
of character. And by character, I think, we simply mean the power to
refrain - to not do the things that we have every right and reason to do
because there's some other larger reason not to do them. And by
character in leadership we mean just having the unusual capacity of
being able to ask other people to refrain, without looking a prig or
hypocrite while doing so. A sane state involves some balance of appetite
served and appetite curbed. Right now, in France and elsewhere,
ordinary people are being asked to take less from the state than they
quite expected, and the rich are being asked to give more to the state
than they quite want to. When the leader shows himself unable to
control his own appetite, the symbolic message, larger than any
political speech, is that the indulgence of appetite is not one among
many goods, but an absolute good - one that trumps prudence, caution and
risks, signalling that everyone needs to curb their appetites except
for those with power.
No one, of course, is obliged to be a role model. But if you do
not wish to be a role model to the public, why become a public man or
woman? If you have no desire to inspire, why take up the thankless task
of inspiration? Or, to put it at its most cynical, if you do not even
put the pursuit of power before pleasure, why pursue it?
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Private lives of French presidents
- Hollande's predecessor Nicolas Sarkozy (2007-2012) has been married three times - his third wife is former model and singer Carla Bruni
- Francois Mitterrand (1981-1995) fathered a daughter with his long-term mistress; the relationship was not revealed until shortly before his death in 1996
- The love life of Jacques Chirac (1996-2007) was subject to much rumour, which he himself fuelled when he said, "There have been women I have loved a lot, as discreetly as possible"
Perhaps what's actually being
pursued is personal pleasure on the back of power, perhaps. For how else
is a pudgy balding middle-aged man to have such a line of beauties in
his life? If so, we have a duty to mark down the politician, as we would
a bore who insists on talking politics when the occasion calls for
gossip. It's the wrong activity for the moment we're in. We have no
business in the bedrooms of our politicians, but once the bedroom door
opens - as in our boundless day it is bound to - there are better
things to see.
All this talk of appetite reminds me of that other great invention that sits besides the open door of the French bedroom, and that is the French table. It was just a year ago that Unesco declared French gastronomy one of the world's cultural treasures, like Angkor Wat or the Tower Of London. I think that one of the ways the French table civilises us is that it asks us both to indulge our hungers and to control them, at the same time. We do not gorge. We wait until everyone is seated. We consider the company even as we eye the dishes. The point of great French dining is not that we should simply sit down and celebrate our appetites, but that we have to transform our hungers into civilised desires. Learning which fork to use means learning when not to. Self-righteousness about other people's appetites is uncivilised. But not being able to control your own when the social occasion demands it is very bad manners. And that is one more thing I learned in France.
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