I really didn't plan to make French my major academic subject at Duke. I had been studying the language for five years (four of those years in high school) when, in my second year at Duke, I decided not to take any more French classes. I had done my duty and had greatly enjoyed the classes in French literature taught by a famous professor named Wallace Fowlie. But I wasn't sure what career I would pursue with a bachelor's degree in French as my only credential.
When I think back on it, that first semester of my sophomore year, with no French classes, was one of the most miserable years of my academic career. Second semester, I signed up for a French conversation class. That helped. Then I made the decision to focus on French for my two final years at Duke. And I also signed up to spend a semester in France as part of the Vanderbilt University study abroad program in Aix-en-Provence in 1970, with which Duke had an informal partnership. I was happy again.
When I finished my undergraduate studies, I applied to graduate school programs at several big universities in the U.S. middle west — Wisconsin, Michigan, Indiana, and Illinois. Following the advice of Duke's professor Fowlie, I ended up deciding to enroll at the University of Illinois. I spent five years in the French department at Champaign-Urbana, alternating with six years in France (Rouen and Paris) facilitated the university. In 1982, I left Paris after living there for three years and returned to the U.S. I settled in Washington DC, where CHM hired me as his assistant on the editorial staff of a magazine published in French by the U.S. government. We worked in French, so for me it wasn't very different from living in Paris. I didn't suspect at that point that I would end up living in California for more than 15 years. Or that I would now be wrapping up 20 years of residency in France.
There are so many ways that our choices each day can affect the rest of our lives, eh?
ReplyDeleteExactly.
DeleteMy Sweet Bear has a Phd from Duke in Classics (Greek and Roman stuff.) I have been there a couple of times. UNC Chapel Hill would also have been nice.
ReplyDeleteSeveral of my friends did Vandy in France. Aix is a nice place to spend some time when one is young. Once France is in your blood, it never leaves.
ReplyDeleteIsn’t it interesting what happens when you follow your heart.
ReplyDeleteIt was a warm feeling I got when you stated that you felt much better once you had gone back to speaking french in the french conversation class. Some of us are just francophiles from the get-go!
ReplyDeleteQuite striking how similar some of the gothic architectural styles on show here are to some places in the UK too!
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