So Foot: Soccer and Multiculturalism in France

Speaker(s): Dominic Thomas (UCLA), C茅cile Alduy (麻豆高清), Fatoumata Seck (麻豆高清)
Please join us for a roundtable discussion with Professors Dominic Thomas (UCLA), C茅cile Alduy (麻豆高清), and Fatoumata Seck (麻豆高清).
From the 鈥淏lack, Blanc, Beur鈥 team that won the World Cup in 1998 -- and the heart of an entire people -- to the second 鈥淐hampion鈥 title of 2018 that Emmanuel Macron sought to make his, soccer has played a decisive, and controversial, role in how France represents itself as a 鈥渕ulticultural society.鈥 In times of victory, unity and pride reign. But cracks appear in the fa莽ade of the 鈥渙ne and indivisible鈥 nation at the slightest weakness on the field or when team members of foreign origins express anti-racist views in the public sphere. How does French soccer bring to the forefront post-colonial tensions in today's contemporary French society?
Professor Dominic Thomas has written extensively on France鈥檚 post-colonial fractures, the question of 鈥渞ace鈥 and multiculturalism across French history and is a keen observer of French politics today. He will be in conversation with Professors C茅cile Alduy, a specialist of French political discourse and far right anti-immigration rhetoric, and Fatoumata Seck, a specialist of Francophone Studies, focusing on the literatures and cultures, of Sub-Saharan Africa and its diasporas.
Dominic Thomas is Madeleine L. Letessier Professor and Chair of the Departments of European Languages and Transcultural Studies at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). He has been CNN European Affairs Commentator since 2017 and author, co-author, editor or co-editor of works on African and European culture and politics, including Black France (2007), Museums in Postcolonial Europe (2010), Francophone sub-Saharan African Literature in Global Contexts (2011), Africa and France (2013), Racial Advocacy in France (2013), Colonial Culture in France since the Revolution (2014), Francophone Afropean Literatures (2014), Afroeuropean Cartographies (2014), The Invention of Race (2014), The Charlie Hebdo events and their aftermath (2016), Vers la guerre des identit茅s (2016), The Colonial Legacy in France (2017), Global France, Global French (2017), Sexe, race et colonies (2018), Sexualit茅s, identit茅s, et corps colonis茅s (2019), and Visualizing Empire (2021). He edits the Global African Voices series at Indiana University Press that focuses on translations of African literature into English, and has translated works by Aim茅 C茅saire, Sony Labou Tansi, Alain Mabanckou, Emmanuel Dongala, and Abdourahman Waberi.
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