Posted by Jay Livingston
In the previous post, I suggested that Americans were much more likely to name streets after military heroes than after luminaries in other fields as the French do.* As Denis Colombi noted in his comment on that post, the French don’t ignore their military victories. But in looking for people to name things after, they cast a wider net.
Whose praises do we sing? Follow the money. If you’re an American, you know the greenback line-up: Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln, Hamilton, Jackson, Grant, Franklin.
How surprising to go to France and see a bill like this – something you would never have seen in the US. (You won’t see it in France any more either, now that the Euro reigns.)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjXvsVLt2NsF6eWQzTE8N1d0AQKhdaPMqpbgs7l6_kxB_DuPWU7UBz5ybkucVblXTUXx7HZz2WDYbJqS0mpgddaNLmdoxguIneZUqgBb9FmMNe_U0sxAJO-MHYBoXDlaVWXEBYv/s400/00+Franc+-+Delacroix.jpg)
An artist (Delacroix) and bare breasts.
Or this:
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjqMgUbDNpzfQxV5eHz8uwNtun-mRjT8MTu63BNvpCPcU3mqPPptkPHq1SVBIiQ5Df_-jdT5pq8lpEEEhQV98Rs6h9Y7trfv8BfRkS8Mut9m5O4bEtLYckbmXEYIzEITJ5qVsaD/s400/00+Franc+Marie.jpg)
A female scientist, Marie Curie, and her husband Pierre.
Or this.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgHYpw-XRIuubRRzSYyLxYQvfGsNa2x905TmkMvIXK7b7IDiU2mjQ_FcA1Sh-VZyxkjVhXdU-907SHKT3K8gFmtP60xKOlCjeoGBob3bfjanoziD2MOCGVRI6UW3jD6f8lXEh27/s400/00+Franc+voltaire.jpg)
Voltaire, a writer remembered chiefly as a satirist. Why not a Mark Twain bill for the US?
Who else filled the bill? Eiffel, Cézanne, Saint-Exupéry, Hugo, Molière, Racine, Voltaire, Debussy . . . .
* We do sometimes confer these naming honors on artists. I myself attended a primary school named after the great composer Stephen Foster.
3 comments:
I believe another sociologist (or at least a criminologist) commented on the stricter requirements of the US for its currency images. See here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sy0VRRVs9wM&NR=1#t=02m15s
You forgot Blaise Pascal, who was represented on the old 500 francs bank note.
http://blog.bourseducollectionneur.com/data/imgs/500-francs-pascal_126038220111484000.jpg
At that time it was the biggest existing bank note, and it was commonly named after the french philosopher : un billet de 500 francs = "un pascal"
(apologies for the bad english...)
The old Dutch notes, particularly the 50, 100, and 250(!) guilder notes didn't have people at all, but a sunflower, a bird (a snip), and a lighthouse. They didn't celebrate artists, but were were works of art themselves. They were beautiful.
(I also miss the fl 2.50 coin, not that you asked.)
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