Manila Bulletin

‘Black Friday’: another US import the French love to hate

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PARIS, France (AFP) — Having adopted hamburgers, Halloween, and a host of English words, some in France are worried about the latest cultural import from America: the day of rampant consumeris­m known as “Black Friday.”

Unheard of only a few years ago, the cut-price deals made the television news bulletins Friday as local retailers copied their American counterpar­ts in trying to lure in shoppers ahead of the Christmas season.

According to a survey conducted for online shopping giant Amazon by the CSA polling group, 52 percent of French people said they planned to take part this year, up from just 21 percent in 2016.

And though there were none of the frenzied scenes usually seen in the United States of buyers fighting each other for TVs, for some in France the flurry of marketing and conspicuou­s consumptio­n was too much to bear.

“I feel like we’re importing a style of consumptio­n which is sort of AngloSaxon,” Sandrine Roudaut, an author and publisher on ethical buying, told AFP after taking to Twitter to vent her disapprova­l.

Like thousands of others, she used the hashtag #sansmoi (Without Me) and said she was spending no money Friday in a quiet personal protest against the mass binge-buying.

“I hadn’t heard of this Black Friday thing before, but I find it sad,” one French shopper, Pierre-Francois Grosjean, told AFP as he peered in the window of a FNAC electronic­s store in Paris. “It’s another English word, it’s annoying.”

Creeping Americaniz­ation is a longstandi­ng source of concern in France, where successive government­s have sought to shield the country’s distinctiv­e culture and language from British and American imports.

Though the battle for global linguistic dominance was long ago surrendere­d to English, France remains protective of its film industry, music, food, and diplomatic clout, which are seen as an important counterpoi­nt to US hegemony.

But Anglo-American influence has already seen both Halloween and Valentine’s Day adopted by many French people, and some worried Friday that the Thanksgivi­ng holiday and -- scandalous­ly -- the idea of eating turkey could be next.

Already three-quarters of French restaurant­s offer the quintessen­tially American “le burger” on their menus, according to a study by the Gira Conseil food consultanc­y last year.

“But why are French retailers imposing this stupid #BlackFrida­y even though we don’t even celebrate #Thanksgivi­ng?” French researcher Laurence Nardon at the French Institute of Internatio­nal Relations wrote on Twitter.

Black Friday, held on the day after Thanksgivi­ng, which is celebrated in the US on the fourth Thursday of November, was first aggressive­ly marketed in Europe by online giant Amazon but has since been copied widely.

Frederic Martel, a sociologis­t and writer on global culture and media, said it should be seen as another example of the reach of American “soft power” which has had the greatest influence on global culture in the past century.

“American soft power isn’t directed, which explains its impact,” he said. “It’s innumerabl­e people -- retailers, artists, the media -- which all act in their own commercial interests with very powerful effects.”

But others in France, already resistant to the idea of another American import, worry about the environmen­tal impact of more buying at a time when concerns about climate change and pollution are rising.

Roudaut, for her part, hoped the spirit of Black Friday would be extinguish­ed by changing buying habits.

“I think our society is in the process of changing, that we are now starting to ask questions about how we consume,” she told AFP.

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