washingtonpost.com: Across the Pond, Bush Gets Quayled
'According to Timesman Jack Malvern, liberal politician Shirley Williams -- also known as the Baroness Williams of Crosby -- recently recounted to an audience in Brighton that "my good friend Tony Blair" told her the following anecdote: "Blair, Bush and [French President] Jacques Chirac were discussing economics and, in particular, the decline of the French economy. 'The problem with the French,' Bush confided to Blair, 'is that they don't have a word for entrepreneur.' "'
Posted by DeLong at July 14, 2002 08:00 PM | TrackbackThe French Don't Have a Word for It Anymore!
It is being reported that Tony Blair told a friend the following anecdote:
"Blair, Bush and [French President] Jacques Chirac were discussing economics and, in particular, the decline of the French economy. 'The problem with the French,' Bush confided to Blair, 'is that they don't have a word for entrepreneur.' "
If this wonderful story is true, George Bush is vastly more insightful - and funnier, and a little bit meaner - than one could have imagined.
The assertion is clearly correct, notwithstanding the obvious French origin of the word "entrepreneur." In English, one uses the expression "The French have a word for it!" where English includes words that would convey the basic meaning of what one intends to say, but it is the French who have crafted the one word that expresses all of the exquisite and exact nuances. Often there is even a single English word that would convey the basic meaning - but its meaning has been cluttered by distracting secondary associations - so one reaches for the purity of the French.
And in this sense, the French clearly do not have a word for "entrepreneur."
It is not an isolated occurrence. Today there are many wonderful ideas that were originated or brought to fruition by the French, but of which those wonderful people now have only an uncertain grasp. One might start with the principles of modern democracy, where the original insights of eighteenth century political thinkers really made the difference. Then there is the concept of modern financial securities and the corporation - where more recently the French securities markets and corporate culture have long seemed to exist in some twilight demi monde.
But perhaps the most spectacular example of the French losing their sure grasp of their own idea is in the case of "abstraction" itself. One can hardly overstate the importance of French-style abstraction in every area of modern life. French abstract political considerations - "separation of powers!" - are the absolute bedrock of the rights of man. That which was abstract French mathematics at its birth - Fourier series and transforms - provides the framework and vocabulary for all of modern science and engineering. Continuing extensions of this approach have recently given rise to information compression technology that powers the Internet and much else.
And then there is Matisse - who neither accepted the plein aire approach of the Impressionists (although he understood them) nor submitted himself to any living academic teacher (although he worked in their studios), but spent years studying and abstracting the great masters of the past. Here was an intellect and an eye that assimilated the Apocalypse of Saint Sever - a set of medieval religious illuminations - and abstracted its artistic force to create Jazz and many of his later works that at a stroke prove an optimistic universal unity that we have somehow in the hurries of modern life simply overlooked. That Matisse contributed more than genius - and that mere genius, as such, of even the highest caliber, is but a modest gift in whatever sphere it is in which artistry intersects our most basic understandings of the value and oneness of human life - can be sensed from the fact that this same Apocalypse of Saint Sever also informs the un-French, fragmenting, pessimistic Guernica created by the Catalan Picasso.
Once could go on for pages with just a list of the awesome products of French and French-style abstraction. But in each case, the French themselves seem to have lost their way. It has been said that there are two species of abstraction: that in which one is boiling down, boiling down, boiling down to an essence - and that in which one is just thinning out, thinning out, thinning out, tossing in buckets. The French leapt this particular species barrier sometime during the 20th century, and we are all the worse for it.
"Entrepreneur"? Today, the term in France is suffused with a certain suggestion of the sociopath, of the cowboy now so dreaded in that country.
Mr. Bush was correct: The French have no word for "entrepreneur." Perhaps they once did. It must have fallen out of a tear in their pocket during the war, or perhaps it escaped through a hole in the fence, or maybe it perished under an inadvertant ink blot from the quill of some well-meaning scholar at the Acadamie. But, whatever the reason, it's gone now.
But to actually have been able to say this, naturally, in conversation with the British Prime Minister and the President of France!? Could the President really have said such a thing?
My God, I wish I had said it - and not just have had it possess me as a diable de l'escalier!
George W. Bush: Monkey, and Proud of It?
One of the Man Without Qualities' astute readers notes that a consequence of an earlier post is that George W. Bush isn't the Smirking Chimp, but the Signifying Monkey.
That may well be correct, and I suppose the President would be proud to be such a monkey. I would.
As one site describes it:
Henry Louis Gates, Jr. wrote The Signifying Monkey, a highly influential modern study of how African-Americans characters speak in the works of some writers, notably Zora Neale Hurston. Gates links the style of speech of these characters to African traditions of storytelling, and suggests that their way of expressing themselves is at the same time guarded (because of the need for caution in a white-run society) and ironic (because they feel powerful nonetheless, in their inner estimation of themselves and their interactions with the African-American community).
Similarly, one can understand Mr. Bush's need for caution in the company of self important but narrow-minded liberals such as most American media representatives, or European derigistes such as Blair and Chirac. And yet he clearly senses his own power, not just by virtue of his office but because he feels powerful, in his inner estimation of himself and his interactions with many American communities, including people of faith. Indeed, Mr. Bush defeated Al Gore, a man of many intellectual pretensions whose supercilious bearing and approach, and that of his campaign and especially some of his supporters, at times suggested that he and they believed him to be running for President of France.
It bothered the Europeans and those of similar mind then, and it appears to bother them now
I have found my people! "The French don't have a word for "entrepeneur" is delightfully witty, as explained above. And the wit comes from his dad, who offered one of the driest quips I have heard. Ask to describe his thoughts after being shot down as a Naval aviator, Bush Sr. replied (regrettably, I'm paraphrasing): "I thought about getting shot down, and my family, and the separation of church and state." Some folks need an explanation, but I am certain Mr. Musil gets it.
Whether the trans-estimable and worthy of worthies Bradley D gets it, I am less certain - he seems more of a Gore-botian, to me.
Aloha,
Posted by: Tom Maguire on July 16, 2002 08:01 PM??
I am french and i can say that the word "entrepreneur" is a common word, and "entrepreneur" in english was stole to french
culture!
Non mais! ce qu il faut pas entendre comme
conneries des fois!