Monday, October 21, 2019
What Would the World be Like Without French Culture essays
What Would the World be Like Without French Culture essays    Like the cultures of most regions of the world, the French culture is     greatly influence by geographical and economic characteristics of the     country. For example, France's fertile soil has played a large role in the     country's reputation as a world culinary centre. The country's extensive     coastal areas on the Atlantic Ocean, English Channel, and Mediterranean     Sea, have played a significant role in making shipping and fishing     important parts of the country's economy. These factors combined with a     relatively less dense population[1] enabled France to become a wealthy     country from the Middle Ages onwards. Although most of this wealth before     the French Revolution in 1789 was concentrated in the crown, a significant     wealthy class had also developed in France. The French monarchs in the     16th, 17th, and 18th centuries (like the papacy in Rome) used part of their     wealth to patronize art and artists on a large scale. This attracted many     of Europe's talented artists to Paris, making it the  Mecca' of art and     gave rise to a rich French culture. Wealth also resulted in the creation of     a leisure class, which had both the time and the means for developing     elegance in dress, manners, furnishings, and architecture. ("France,"           A world minus French culture would be deprived of one of the world's     most varied literature noted for its profound examination of human society     and the individual's place within society. There would be no literary     movements in the world called dada, surrealism, existentialism, theater of     the absurd, the new novel, and postmodernismall 20th century literary     styles led by French artists. We would be unaware of the innovative and     enlightening works of the great French poets such as Franzois Villon[2] and     Arthur Rimbaud,[3] influential philosophers such as Jean Jacques Rousseau     and Voltairewhose writings in the  Age of Enlightenment' ins...     
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.