Global Studies - Diversity & Integration - Paris: A Multicultural Perspective

Paris, France

Evelyne Accad, Professor Emerita
Dinah Armstead, Teaching Assistant

12/9/07

LAS 199: Paris: A Multicultural Perspective

Professor Evelyne Accad, UIUC Courses Abroad


AND

IN 350: The Immigrant Experience in France

Professor Cheryl Toman, January Immersion semester in Paris 2008 for Millikin University

Dec. 28, 2007Jan. 12, 2008

Course philosophy: This course will introduce students to the impact of globalization through the study of the immigrant experience in Paris, its multi-cultural identities with the negotiation of cultural beliefs and practices. They will be made aware of cultural diversity with an appreciation for others; their interest as well as their understanding of other cultures will be aroused through the celebration/appreciation of diversity, broadening their disciplinary and cultural perspective. They will improve their critical and analytical thinking through comparisons with French education versus their US experience thanks to the visit they will have in French schools and talking to French students as well as their visits to immigrant associations and cultural centers.



Course objective: By the end of this course taught on-site in Paris, the student will have read and discussed works by prominent authors of Sub-Saharan Africa and the Maghreb / Mashrek such as, Calixthe Beyala, Evelyne Accad, Thérèse Kuoh-Moukoury, and Noureddine Aba. Excerpts of Linda Le's Slander will offer a perspective from the Vietnamese community. The student will be able to identify both literature-specific and universal themes, and will be made aware of issues that deal with women of the Francophone developing world and the immigrant experience in particular using Paris as the model. The student will debate and explore issues such as racism, religious tolerance, feminism, polygamy, colonialism, and post-colonialism, as well as other aspects of a multicultural society. More specific themes include new immigration laws and the sans-papiers, secularism and the veil, the banlieue, the Lebanese war, the Algerian revolution, Islamism, and African women and power. Students will supplement the reading of novels and articles with interviews with the authors themselves, and various other visits to artistic and cultural centers. Students will also conduct sociological studies of multicultural neighborhoods and visit French secondary schools and classes préparatoires to discuss first hand the views of France's youth on multiculturalism and other pertinent issues during a round table format designed specifically for that purpose. Studies of the arts will also be included. The students come to appreciate African, Asian and Arab cultures that they encounter during their stay in Paris through sampling a day-in-the-life of the protagonists from the novels read for the course. Due to the fact that these characters “come alive” through these visits, the students are likely to be more accepting and understanding of cultural differences due to the human element that has been introduced by the readings.



Creative works and materials:


Loukoum: The Little Prince of Belleville by Calixthe Beyala, 1995 (in course packet)


Poppy of the Massacre by Evelyne Accad, translated by C. Hahn, L’Harmattan, 2006.


Essential Encounters by Thérèse Kuoh-Moukoury with Introduction by C. Toman, MLA, 2002


“A Lebanese Anguishes from Paris” by Evelyne Accad

It Was Yesterday Sabra and Chatila and Montjoie! Palestine by Noureddine Aba, Bilingual edition edited and translated by Toman and Accad, L’Harmattan, 2004


Slander (excerpts) by Linda Lê, 1996 (in course packet)

Articles and Essays (in course packet):

“Polygamy, Disrupted Reproduction, and the State: Muslim Migrants in Paris, France” by

Carolyn Sargent and Dennis Cordell (2002)

Beirut, The City that Moves Me” by Evelyne Accad (2002)

“To Write in a Foreign Language” by Etel Adnan (1996)

“The Muslims in France and the French Model of Integration” by Dominique Maillard (2005)

"The Muslims of France" by Milton Viorst (1996)

Grading: 25% Journal

20% Interviews with authors / scholars

15% Self-guided ethnic neighborhood report (oral and written)

20% Participation, attendance, prepared activities

20% Final exam

Journals (25%): Students will be responsible for writing their reflections in essays of two pages minimum per day. Journals will include both guided and free writing exercises based on the course activities. Within these journal assignments, you will also write on our visit with English classes and their instructors at three very diverse schools in Paris. During the visits at these lycées, students should have various questions in mind to ask their French counterparts. Questions should be related to the themes of the course, and the various responses will be recorded in the journal assignments for that particular day. It is also to be expected that American students will respond frankly and thoughtfully to any questions the French students may have for them as well. The purpose of the exchange is to promote understanding and to identify cultural parallels.

Interviews with authors / scholars (20%): Students are expected to formulate three questions to be asked during the session with all authors / scholars: Accad, a prominent Arab novelist / scholar writing on Arab women, Kuoh-Moukoury, the first woman novelist of Sub-Saharan Africa, and Madeleine Aba, wife of deceased Algerian author Noureddine Aba, and Paul Vieille, anthropologist. Questions should be thought provoking and perhaps question a certain interpretation of one of the readings. Students may choose three of the invited guests and write-up their interview not as a summary, but rather as a further discussion of the points raised.

Self-guided discovery / ethnic neighborhood report (oral and written) (15%): The course allows us to cover in depth only the largest immigrant communities in Paris. Therefore, one day of the course will be set aside for students to discover in groups of three or four certain other ethnic communities in Paris by visiting locations frequented by members of the Turkish, Kurdish, Indian, Egyptian, Armenian, Iranian, Congolese, and Tibetan communities among others. Each discovery will include three or four addresses provided by the instructors. Students are responsible the following day to report on their research to the class. A written report is also to be included in the final paper.

Participation (20%): Students must attend every class and non-attendance, with the exception of confirmed illness, will not be tolerated. Each absence will result in a significant reduction in points and missed assignments. Students are also expected to participate rigorously in any class discussions and activities. As the course is an intensive session, students who miss more than two class sessions automatically receive a grade of 'F'. Students may make up missed work at the discretion of the course instructor.

Final exam (20%): An essay-style exam based on the material covered in the course. Course materials may be consulted to complete the exam.

11/4/07

Homework


Following is the first homework assignment.



Your pre-departure journal is due Nov. 16th by 5 pm:



Pre-Departure Journal Assignment


a) Write about your own “culture”. This can take any direction you want, but it must be sincerely addressed.


b) Take one or more “American” value we discussed and give examples of how you’ve seen it demonstrated in American society. If you have them, give examples of how these values have compared/conflicted with values/traditions from other cultures.


If you were not in class, you may go to the following webpage for help: (http://www.peacecorps.gov/wws/educators/enrichment/culturematters/Ch2/thirteencategories.html ), however, you are not limited to this one resource. You may draw from any resource, including personal experience. While there is no “right” or “wrong” answer, a well thought out, well articulated response should be submitted by all.

Journal Assignments should be 1-3 pages and are due by 5pm Friday, Nov. 16th.

Useful Web Pages

Bonjour Everyone!

How are all of you doing? Here’s a small Webliography on Paris you might enjoy.
Here are some cites to get you started:
There are Les Pages de Paris (The Paris Pages) online in English and French, designed for visiteurs and will keep you busy for a while: http://www.paris.org
To review what we learned in class about how to ride the metro, please take a look at: http://www.paris.org/Metro/
Read about the Carte Orange that you got at the orientation meeting:
http://www.paris.org/Expos/ParisTickets/Orange/
Take a look here as well…
http://www.paris.org/Monuments/
http://www.paris.org/postcards/metro.html
(free e-postcards): http://paris.parishotels.com/ecards/index.php?lang=en
You can ask questions about travel to and around Paris, or on life in Paris on the "Thorn Tree" Travel Forum, a service from LonelyPlanet.com that allows you to post questions (for free) and have anyone in the world who wants to answer respond.
See it for yourself:
http://thorntree.lonelyplanet.com

Need help brushing up on your French? Check this out:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/languages/french/lj/
http://french.about.com/
http://www.homestead.com/Anne_Fox/LearningFrench.html

***More links:
http://www.nationalgeographic.com/places/places-of-a-lifetime/paris-thebasics.html
http://cityguide-europe.com/fr/paris /

If you have know of any resource, webpage or otherwise, please share it with the group by responding with a comment. Thank you.
Bonne chance et Bon voyage!
Sincerely,
Ms. Dinah
Assistant Director, OMSA
Tel. (217) 333-0054 armstead@ad.uiuc.edu
130 Student Services Buidling, MC-306, 610 E. John Street

10/22/07

Pre-Departure Class Times

Pre-Departure Class Times:

Saturday, October 13 11:00am - 12:30pm Lucy Ellis Lounge, Foreign Language Building


Friday, November 2nd 3:30pm- 5pm Office of Minority Student Affairs- Academic Services - 701 S. Gregory St Suite I(in the East Campus Commercialization Bldg- across from Krannert).


Wednesday, November 14th 5:00pm- 6:30pm Location: 1120 FLB (Foreign Language Building)

PARIS CHECKLIST: January Immersion 2008

PARIS: A MULTICULTURAL PERSPECTIVE ∞ DEC 28 2007-JAN 12 2008


Departure: Leaving on Air France Flight 051 from Chicago O'Hare at 5:40 p.m. on Friday, December 28. International Terminal 5.

Arrival in Paris, Charles de Gaulle Airport at 8:50 a.m. on December 29th.

Check-in at Air France counter no later than two hours prior. Students must arrange their own transportation to and from O’Hare. Tickets are to be picked up at the study abroad office before students leave for winter break at the end of the semester.


Flight information home: Air France Flight 50 from Charles de Gaulle Airport at 1:15 p.m. Arriving at O’Hare at 3:30 p.m. Saturday, January 12th, 2008.


Accommodations:


Paris "Le d'Artagnan" http://www.hostel-in.com/indexeng.html


80, rue Vitruve - 75020


Paris Phone : 33 (0)1.40.32.34.56


paris.le-dartagnan@fuaj.org


From the US, dial 011-33-1-40-32-34-56 (Paris is 7 hours ahead of Central Standard Time). Cheaper rates may be obtained by dialing “10-10-345” before the above set of numbers. You can also use French calling cards. Do NOT buy American phone cards here as they are a waste of money compared to the French cards.




1. Get $50 in Euros before leaving (American Express or Thomas Cook offices or O'Hare Airport). The exchange rate of the euro fluctuates depending on the stock market. You do not want to change all your money here because the rate is much better in France. Currently, one euro is about $1.47.



2. Bring a small photo if you want to take advantage of the cheapest transport pass. If you attended the orientation meeting, passes were given to you to fill about before leaving.



3. Bring your student ID -- unlike in the US, France has many, MANY more discounts for students (from museums to clubs). Also, you may want to purchase an ISIC (International Student Identity Card) from Travel Cuts on Green street.



4. Don't forget books and materials for the class. You also will need to give us the equivalent of 30 euros once in Paris for the purchase of two additional texts needed for the course. (This is cheaper than shipping them to the US.)



5. No more than two checked bags and a carry-on are allowed (purses do not count towards baggage allowance). O’Hare may not let you lock your bags due to inspection procedures - - please take anything of value on the plane with you in a carry-on. Since summer 2006, there are additional regulations on the amount of liquids you can carry in your hand luggage (less than 3 oz.)



6. Have ticket and passport handy at all times at the airport.



7. THe teaching assistant for the course who will also be staying at teh youth hostel is Dinah Armstead, an Assistant Director in the Office of Minority Student Affairs at the University of lllinois. She has extensive experience with the Paris course, has lived in France, and is fluent in the language.



8. You can always contact the two professors of the course while in Paris. Professor Toman’s cell number is 06.25.12.31.08. Professor Accad’s cell phone is 06.25.51.57.02. The assistant, Dinah's cell phone is: 06.26.13.23.20.



9. You do not need sheets, but you do need your own toiletries such as shampoo, soap, etc., plus you will need to bring your own towels. As you are sharing a room with up to seven people, past students of the course have advised that you bring shower sandals.



10. Millikin students will need about $50 for transportation passes and museum entrance fees while in Paris. These expenses are already covered in the fees paid by students from The University of Illinois.



11. Most of the time, attire is casual, but you need one nicer outfit (no jeans) for the visit to Lycée Louis-le-Grand and “athletic” clothing for the African dance course. Shoes are not worn in the dance studio.



12. Please bring three magazines or newspapers in English to give to the French students we will meet as part of the course. These readingmaterials need not be brand new—they may be magazines that you have already read and would have discarded. However, they prove most useful to French students studying English.



13. You get breakfast and one other meal per day as part of the package.




14. Any problems? Professor Accad’s email is: evaccad@aol.com and her number in Paris is: 011-33-1-42.26.13.82. Professor Toman’s number in Chicago is 312-316-3707 and Dinah Armstead can be reached on campus at (217) 333-0054 or at armstead@ad.uiuc.edu.


15. Our website for the course with announcements and assignments is:
www.illinoisinfrance.blogspot.com