This article investigates the “post-multicultural era” in France and the conditions and lives of racial and ethnic minorities who inhabit this environment. Using the term “post-multicultural era” to describe French society is not a completely straightforward matter; in France, multiculturalism has always been understood as irreconcilable with French republicanism. As a result, it has never taken root and has often been the object of mistrust and even rejection. However, there is an underlying but significant change that demands more rights for minorities.
On the one hand, new forms of blatant discrimination have emerged over the past 15 years under the name of “sexual democracy,” which functions to justify the exclusion of racial and ethnic minorities under the pretext of defending “sexual minorities.” On the other hand, new types of practices have appeared within anti-discrimination movements, such as the “non-mixité (unmixed)” movement, which demands safe spaces reserved exclusively for victims of racial, sexual, and other types of discrimination.
Contrary to the sharp criticisms of “non-mixité,” which argue that it will inevitably lead to social division and dangerous“ communautarisme( self-segregation or clannishness in French),” its advocates claim that the practices of “non-mixité” are not the ultimate goal, but rather a provisional and necessary step to achieve “color-brave universalism” and overcome the traditionally binary opposition between “color-blind” and “color-conscious.”
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