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Europe unites in hatred of French
By Henry Samuel in Paris
(Filed: 17/05/2005)
Language, history, cooking and support for rival football teams still divide
Europe. But when everything else fails, one glue binds the continent together:
hatred of the French.
Typically, the French refuse to accept what arrogant, overbearing monsters they
are.
But now after the publication of a survey of their neighbors' opinions of them
at least they no longer have any excuse for not knowing how unpopular they are.
Why the French are the worst company on the planet, a wry take on France by two
of its citizens, dredges up all the usual evidence against them. They are crazy
drivers, strangers to customer service, obsessed by sex and food and devoid of a
sense of humor.
But it doesn't stop there, boasting a breakdown, nation by nation, of what in
the French irritates them.
Perhaps unsurprisingly, Britons described them as "chauvinists, stubborn,
nannied and humorless". However, the French may be more shocked by the views of
other nations.
For the Germans, the French are "pretentious, offhand and frivolous". The Dutch
describe them as "agitated, talkative and shallow." The Spanish see them as
"cold, distant, vain and impolite" and the Portuguese as "preaching". In Italy
they comes across as "snobs, arrogant, flesh-loving, righteous and
self-obsessed" and the Greeks find them "not very with it, egocentric bons
vivants".
Interestingly, the Swedes consider them "disobedient, immoral, disorganized,
neo-colonialist and dirty".
But the knockout punch to French pride came in the way the poll was conducted.
People were not asked what they hated in the French, just what they thought of
them.
"Interviewees were simply asked an open question - what five adjectives sum up
the French," said Olivier Clodong, one of the study's two authors and a
professor of social and political communication at the Ecole Superieur de
Commerce, in Paris. "The answers were overwhelmingly negative."
According to Mr Clodong, the old adage that France is wonderful, it's just the
French who are the problem, is shared across Europe.
"We are admired for our trains, the Airbus and Michelin tyres. But the buck
stops there," he said.
Another section of the study deals with how the French see the rest of Europe.
"Believe it or not, the English and the French use almost exactly the same
adjectives to describe each other - bar the word 'insular'," Mr Coldong said.
"So the feelings are mutual."
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