A landscape of popular perceptions increasingly indifferent to French has sent
teachers around the United States scurrying for new books that will draw students to the
language they love. In many cases, the profession has fixed on Francophonie as a
solution, offering, it seems, the practical, down-to-earth usefulness that the profession thinks
students want and providing, at the same time, a neat link to popular and sometimes
simple-minded notions of multiculturalism. Ager's new book, 6 years after his excellent
Sociolinguistics and Contemporary French, demonstrates that
Francophonie is far more problematic than many have thought. Less technical than the
earlier book, this emphatically interdisciplinary work ought to be required reading for all
prospective teachers of
French.