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Critics at Large | The New Yorker

Les Américains à Paris

Critics at Large | The New Yorker

The New Yorker

Society & Culture

4.4679 Ratings

🗓️ 14 August 2025

⏱️ 48 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Nineteenth-century Americans regarded Paris as a libertine paradise: a smorgasbord of food and fashion, of night life and sex. Today, the pull toward France endures, though the precise nature of its appeal has shifted. On the second in a series of Critics at Large interview episodes, Alexandra Schwartz talks with the staff writer Lauren Collins about her work as The New Yorker’s woman on the ground in France and the long lineage of Francophilic Americans—from Edith Wharton to James Baldwin and, yes, even “Emily.” The two consider how French femininity has been marketed to American women and how modern influencers transmit an incomplete picture of Paris. “Yes, it’s romantic, and, yes, it’s picturesque, but it’s also a big, loud, dirty, profane, complicated city that evolves and changes like everywhere else,” Collins says. “There’s a lot of misbegotten essentializing that happens when Americans start talking about France.”

Read, watch, and listen with the critics:

Ces restaurants qui gonflent l’addition des touristes américains,” by Mathieu Hennequin (Le Parisien)
Can Emmanuel Macron Stem the Populist Tide?,” by Lauren Collins (The New Yorker)
The Unlikely Rise of French Tacos,” by Lauren Collins (The New Yorker)
Dearest Edith,” by Janet Flanner (The New Yorker)
The Custom of the Country,” by Edith Wharton
Go Tell It on the Mountain,” by James Baldwin
Giovanni’s Room,” by James Baldwin
The Discovery of What It Means to Be an American,” by James Baldwin (The New York Times)
“Emily in Paris” (2020–)
“Sex and the City” (1998–2004)
French Women Don’t Get Fat,” by Mireille Guiliano
Bringing Up Bébé,” by Pamela Druckerman

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Critics at Large is a weekly discussion from The New Yorker that explores the latest trends in books, television, film, and more. Join us every Thursday as we make unexpected connections between classic texts and pop culture.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome to Critics at Large, a podcast from The New Yorker.

0:07.6

I'm Nomi Fry.

0:08.7

I'm Vincent Cunningham.

0:09.8

And I'm Alex Schwartz.

0:11.3

Each week on this show, we make sense of what's happening in the culture right now and how we got here.

0:17.2

Hello, my friends.

0:18.3

Hello.

0:19.0

So good to see.

0:24.3

So. Hello, my friends. Hello. So good to see it. So I'm up next in our summer interview series.

0:27.5

We have each selected a colleague to bring on the show as a guest critic.

0:31.3

My pick was the brilliant Lauren Collins, and we are here to talk about a city near and dear to both of our hearts, Paris.

0:38.6

More specifically, we are talking about Americans in Paris.

0:43.1

I feel like there's so much to say about this.

0:45.5

A whole canon emerges the moment you say it.

0:48.4

Frankly, we could make our own podcast just about Americans in Paris.

0:51.3

I think this became evident, but we kept it here to one single

0:54.9

episode. But we range pretty widely. We're going to be talking about Edith Wharton, James Baldwin,

0:59.2

Janet Flanner. We will even dip a manicured toe to Emily. Wow. A pedicured toe. A pedicured toe.

1:06.7

Thank you so much. That is quite right. All to figure out what has drawn Americans to the city of light for centuries? Because I think Paris is a fantasy for Americans. It always has been. But how much of that is still a reality and how much of it was ever the truth. So that's today on critics at large. Les Americans at Paris.

1:35.3

Lauren Collins,

1:36.0

Bonjour.

1:37.3

Bonjour.

...

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