"In recent months, we have crossed a very worrying milestone."
Romain *, a student at Sciences Po Paris, does not hide his apprehension.
Like many of his comrades, he sees a growing rise in racialist, decolonialist and indigenousist thinking within his establishment.
“With the coronavirus, the only link we have with our school is on the internet.
And almost every two weeks, we see a new controversy created by one of these small groups, ”
denounces the young man, who prefers to keep his anonymity for fear of reprisals.
"
There is such a haro on the subject that one wonders even if it is not dangerous to talk about it, to alert people to what is happening
", he fears. he.
These people spend their lives tracking down who is dominant and who is dominated in a totally Manichean way.
Anne-Sophie Nogaret, co-author with Sami Biasoni of the French book despite them.
Racialists, decolonialists, indigenists: those who want to deconstruct France.
The last two controversies on the subject have caused much ink to flow.
The premiere took place in August.
During this summer period, Sciences Po publishes on its site and on its Instagram account a reading list intended for its students.
Among the ten recommended books
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