Francophonie Explained

The Francophonie or Francophone world is the whole body of people and organisations around the world who use the French language regularly for private or public purposes. The term was coined by Onésime Reclus[1] in 1880 and became important as part of the conceptual rethinking of cultures and geography in the late 20th century.

When used to refer to the French-speaking world, the Francophonie encompasses the countries and territories where French is official or serves as an administrative or major secondary language, which spans 50 countries and dependencies across all inhabited continents.[2] The vast majority of these are also member states of the French: [[Organisation internationale de la Francophonie]] (OIF), a body uniting countries where French is spoken and taught.

Denominations

Francophonie, francophonie and francophone space are syntagmatic. This expression is relevant to countries which speak French as their national language, may it be as a mother language or a secondary language.

These expressions are sometimes misunderstood or misused by English speakers. They can be synonymous but most of the time they are complementary.

Origins

The term francophonie was invented by Onésime Reclus in 1880: "We also put aside four large countries, Senegal, Gabon, Cochinchina and Cambodia, whose future from a "Francophone" point of view is still very doubtful, except perhaps for Senegal" (in French « Nous mettons aussi de côté quatre grands pays, le Sénégal, le Gabon, la Cochinchine, le Cambodge dont l’avenir au point de vue « francophone » est encore très douteux sauf peut-être pour le Sénégal »); and then used by geographers.[6]

During the Third Republic, the French language progressively gained importance.

The, a French institution created in 1635 in charge of officially determining and unifying the rules and evolutions of the French language, participated in the promotion and the development of the French language.[7]

Countries

See main article: List of countries where French is an official language. The definition of the Francophone world is distinguished by countries and territories where French is an official language, those where it is the native language of the majority of the population, and those where the language is used as a working language of administration or where the language still has an important cultural impact and prestige. There are 50 countries and territories which fall into this category, although in some countries the Francosphere is limited to certain regions or states.[8]

Being merely a member state of the OIF does not automatically make a country or territory "francophone" in the sense of the language having a major role in its society, be it as a working language or a strong cultural heritage to the French language. This is in part due to the OIF increasingly admitting new members based on loose criteria such as "significant second language learning" of French or parties interested in furthering the organisation's promotion of human rights, democracy, international cooperation, sustainable development, cultural and linguistic diversity, and education and training.[9] Therefore, member states such as Romania, Egypt, and Armenia which have minimal to no connection with the French language and culture should not be considered as part of the Francophone world.[10] [11]

Rank Country/territoryFrench-speaking
population[12]
Land area (km2) Land area (sq mi)
1 66,394,000 551,695 213,011
2 48,925,000 2,344,858 905,354
3 14,904,000 2,381,741 919,595
4 13,457,000 446,550 172,410
5 11,491,000 475,650 183,650
6 11,061,000 9,984,670 3,855,100
7 9,325,000 322,462 124,503
8 8,815,000 30,528 11,787
9 7,729,000 587,041 226,658
10 6,321,000 163,610 63,170
11 5,889,000 41,291 15,943
12 5,404,000 274,200 105,900
13 4,906,000 27,750 10,710
14 4,640,000196,712 75,951
15 4,306,000 114,763 44,310
16 3,777,000 245,857 94,926
17 3,703,000 1,240,192 478,841
18 3,554,000 56,785 21,925
19 3,518,000 342,000 132,000
20 3,363,000 1,267,000 489,200
21 2,540,000 10,452 4,036
22 2,249,000 1,284,000 495,800
23 United States
2,179,000 9,525,067 3,677,647
24 1,519,000 267,668 103,347
25 1,435,000 622,984 240,535
26 1,074,000 25,680 9,915
27 926,000 2,040 788
28 799,000 2,511 970
29 793,000 26,338 10,169
30 693,000 331,340 127,930
31 656,000 1,030,700 397,960
32 642,000 2,586 998
33 508,000 23,200 8,960
34 463,000 181,035 69,898
35 336,000 1,628 629
36 303,000 1,128 436
37 288,000 18,575 7,172
38 278,000 4,167 1,609
39 237,000 1,861 719
40 204,000 236,800 91,430
41 195,000 84,000 32,433
42 180,000 374 144
43 100,000 12,189 4,706
44 53,000 457 176
45 39,000 2 0.7
46 33,000 53 20
47 India
10,000 483 186
48 9,000 142 55
49 8,000 20 8
50 6,000 230 89
Total246,271,00019,103,0177,375,547

See also

References

Notes and References

  1. http://geography.uoregon.edu/murphy/articles/Murphy%20-%20Placing%20Louisiana%20in%20the%20Francophone%20World%20with%20figures.pdf Alexander B. Murphy, "Placing Louisiana in the Francophone World: Opportunities and Challenges"
  2. Wolff, Alexandre. Qu’est-ce qu’un francophone? (What is a francophone?), Observatoire de la langue française, 2015. (in French)
  3. Web site: Qu'est-ce que la Francophonie ? - Organisation internationale de la Francophonie. francophonie.org. 7 July 2016. 5 December 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20141205014158/http://www.francophonie.org/-Qu-est-ce-que-la-Francophonie-.html. dead.
  4. Web site: Données et statistiques sur la langue française - Organisation internationale de la Francophonie. francophonie.org. 7 July 2016. 23 March 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170323225658/https://www.francophonie.org/carto.html. dead.
  5. L'année francophone internationale, Québec, ACCT, 1994
  6. Pinhas . Luc . 2004 . Aux origines du discours francophone . Communication & Langages . 140 . 1 . 69–82 . 10.3406/colan.2004.3270.
  7. Web site: La Francophonie: The History of the French Language Training School . 2023-02-09 . Language Connections . July 2022 . en-US.
  8. Vigouroux. Cecile. 2013. Francophonie. Annual Review of Anthropology. 42. 379–397. 10.1146/annurev-anthro-092611-145804.
  9. Christian Rioux, "Franco... quoi?", Le Devoir, Montreal, 4 September 1999.
  10. https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/FR/TXT/HTML/?uri=CELEX%3A91997E001630 QUESTION ECRITE no 1630/97 de Jean-Antoine GIANSILY à la Commission. Avenir des brevets en Europe
  11. Web site: La Francophonie au bord de la cacophonie ?. Le. Vif. 9 October 2018. Site-LeVif-FR. 2 September 2019. 22 October 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20201022094138/https://www.levif.be/actualite/international/la-francophonie-au-bord-de-la-cacophonie/article-normal-1037567.html. live.
  12. https://www.francophonie.org/sites/default/files/2023-03/Rapport-La-langue-francaise-dans-le-monde_VF-2022.pdf La langue française dans le monde, 2022