Emmanuel Todd
Born
in Saint-Germain-en-Laye, France
May 16, 1951
Genre
Influences
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La défaite de l'Occident
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published
2024
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11 editions
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After the Empire: The Breakdown of the American Order (European Perspectives: A Series in Social Thought and Cultural Criticism)
by
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published
2002
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39 editions
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Qui est Charlie ? Sociologie d'une crise religieuse
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published
2015
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20 editions
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Les Luttes de classes en France au XXIe siècle
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published
2020
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3 editions
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Après la démocratie
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published
2008
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7 editions
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Le Mystère français
by
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published
2013
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L'invention de L'Europe
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published
1990
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5 editions
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L'illusion économique. Essai sur la stagnation des sociétés développées
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published
1998
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The Explanation of Ideology: Family Structure and Social Systems
by
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published
1985
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3 editions
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Où en sont-elles ?: Une esquisse de l'histoire des femmes
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“L’idéologie, certes nécessaire aux sociétés pour se projeter dans l’avenir, peut se révéler exaspérante quand elle nie la réalité, quand elle affirme le faux.”
― Où en sont-elles ?: Une esquisse de l'histoire des femmes
― Où en sont-elles ?: Une esquisse de l'histoire des femmes
“Page 61-2
... Rome expanded rapidly ... and became master over the entire Mediterranean Basin. It then had unlimited resources in terms of land, money, and slaves. It collected taxes or tribute throughout its empire and was able to transfer to the central capital massive quantities of foodstuffs and manufactured items. The peasants and the artisans of Italy saw their economic base disappear as this Mediterranean economy was "globalized" by the political domination of Rome. The society was polarized between, on the one hand, a mass of economically useless plebeians and, on the other, a predatory plutocracy. A minority gorged with wealth oversaw the remaining proletarianized population. The middle-classes collapsed, a process that brought about the end of the republic and the beginning of the political form known as "empire" in conformity with the observations made by Aristotle about the importance of intermediate social classes for the stability of political systems.
Since one could not eliminate the plebeians, intractable but geographically central as they were, they came to be nourished and distracted at the empire's expense with "bread and circuses."
Page 64-5:
The positive American trade balance, when only "advanced technology" is counted, dropped from 35 billion dollars in 1990 to 5 billion in 2001 and had disappeared entirely to become one more element in the overall trade deficit in January 2002.
This fall in economic strength is not compensated for by the activities of American-based multinationals. Since 1998 the profits that they bring back into the country amount to less than what foreign companies that have set up shop in the United States are taking back to their own countries.
Page 68:
In conformity with classical economic theory, the general opening up of commercial exchange has brought about an increase in inequality throughout the world. This general exchange tends to introduce into each country the same disparities in revenue that exist at the level of the whole planet. ... The compression of worker revenues caused by free trade revives the traditional dilemma of capitalism that has now spread across the globe: low salaries do not allow for the absorption of increases in production.
Page 17: In developed countries a new class is emerging that comprises roughly 20 percent of the population in terms of sheer numbers but controls about half of each nation's wealth. This new class has more and more trouble putting up with the constraint of universal suffrage.”
― After the Empire: The Breakdown of the American Order
... Rome expanded rapidly ... and became master over the entire Mediterranean Basin. It then had unlimited resources in terms of land, money, and slaves. It collected taxes or tribute throughout its empire and was able to transfer to the central capital massive quantities of foodstuffs and manufactured items. The peasants and the artisans of Italy saw their economic base disappear as this Mediterranean economy was "globalized" by the political domination of Rome. The society was polarized between, on the one hand, a mass of economically useless plebeians and, on the other, a predatory plutocracy. A minority gorged with wealth oversaw the remaining proletarianized population. The middle-classes collapsed, a process that brought about the end of the republic and the beginning of the political form known as "empire" in conformity with the observations made by Aristotle about the importance of intermediate social classes for the stability of political systems.
Since one could not eliminate the plebeians, intractable but geographically central as they were, they came to be nourished and distracted at the empire's expense with "bread and circuses."
Page 64-5:
The positive American trade balance, when only "advanced technology" is counted, dropped from 35 billion dollars in 1990 to 5 billion in 2001 and had disappeared entirely to become one more element in the overall trade deficit in January 2002.
This fall in economic strength is not compensated for by the activities of American-based multinationals. Since 1998 the profits that they bring back into the country amount to less than what foreign companies that have set up shop in the United States are taking back to their own countries.
Page 68:
In conformity with classical economic theory, the general opening up of commercial exchange has brought about an increase in inequality throughout the world. This general exchange tends to introduce into each country the same disparities in revenue that exist at the level of the whole planet. ... The compression of worker revenues caused by free trade revives the traditional dilemma of capitalism that has now spread across the globe: low salaries do not allow for the absorption of increases in production.
Page 17: In developed countries a new class is emerging that comprises roughly 20 percent of the population in terms of sheer numbers but controls about half of each nation's wealth. This new class has more and more trouble putting up with the constraint of universal suffrage.”
― After the Empire: The Breakdown of the American Order
“Quant à l'Amérique, si bruyamment multiculturaliste, elle offre l'image d'un mode de vie effroyablement homogène, qu'il s'agisse de mœurs familiales, de style architectural ou d'habitudes alimentaires. Toute différence concrète semble engendrer un réflexe de peur, et doit être strictement cataloguée pour être acceptée. Seule l'hypothèse d'une hétérophobie fondamentale des sociétés différentialistes permet d'expliquer l'hystérie américaine devant une poignée de sympathisants communistes à l'époque du maccarthysme, le besoin américain de catégoriser les homosexuels pour les accepter, le refus typiquement américain du film étranger qui doit être re-tourné selon des normes locales pour être présenté à une population qui s'inquiète de la moindre différence culturelle objective. Toute différence est une menace dans ce monde uù chacun se sent d'autant plus fragile qu'il n'est pas, au niveau inconscient, sûr d'être semblable à tous.”
― Le Destin Des Immigrés: Assimilation Et Ségrégation Dans Les Démocraties Occidentales
― Le Destin Des Immigrés: Assimilation Et Ségrégation Dans Les Démocraties Occidentales
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