The sociologist Michel Pinçon, who had started as a sociologist of the workers before turning to the transmission of wealth in the nobility and the upper middle class, died, we learned Wednesday from his wife.
Michel Pinçon, 80, former director of research at the CNRS, died Monday at his home in the Paris region, following being affected by Alzheimer’s disease, said Monique Pinçon-Charlot, 76.
Most of his work was written in collaboration with her. “I always say that we wrote 27 books with four hands,” she told AFP. Their reference works are called ‘In the beautiful districts’ (PUF, 1989) or even ‘The Ghettos of the gotha’ (Seuil, 2007).
He had first published two books on popular circles, including one in 1982 (‘Cohabiter’) at the end of a long investigation in immersion in a housing estate in the suburbs of Nantes.
‘In the nice neighborhoods’
Then, noting the disinterest of their sociologist colleagues for the most privileged, the couple had chosen to immerse themselves in the life of wealthy families. Thanks to the intervention of a colleague from this social class, Paul Rendu, they had been able to speak with and share a little of the life of the very rich, of whom they were extremely critical.
‘Living for the most part in their neighborhoods and in protected areas, the privileged classes have little contact with other social groups’, write the authors of ‘In the beautiful neighborhoods’.
Since their retirement in 2007 and the abandonment of their reserve obligation, the Pinçon-Charlots have taken positions that are sometimes strongly criticized, especially for taxation of the rich.
‘Class neuroses’
Born May 18, 1942 in Lonny, a village in the Ardennes, Michel Pinçon grew up in a working-class family.
“He has been passionate regarding sociology since his childhood, with his working-class background in the Meuse valley, and his attachment to the welfare state which gave children like him the opportunity to study,” explained his wife.
They met in 1965 during their studies in Lille. ‘It was a mutual love at first sight, between two lame people who had inverted class neuroses’, commented Monique Pinçon-Charlot, who is of bourgeois origin, daughter of a magistrate.
Fascinated by the sociology of Pierre Bourdieu, who was their professor at the University of Lille, they had a long career as researchers from the 1970s.
“Michel has always been inhabited by this desire to understand injustices, whether social, economic, and above all symbolic, those from which he himself suffered the most,” explained his wife.
Survey of the ultra-rich
The two sociologists have published pamphlets once morest two Presidents of the Republic. This was Nicolas Sarkozy in 2010, in ‘The President of the Rich: An Inquiry into the Oligarchy in Nicolas Sarkozy’s France’. Then Emmanuel Macron in 2019, in ‘The President of the ultra-rich: chronicle of class contempt in the politics of Emmanuel Macron’.
The national secretary of the Communist Party Fabien Roussel, on Twitter, paid ‘homage to this fellow traveler, a great sociologist, who never ceased, with Monique, to decipher the relationship of domination in all its forms’.
‘Michel Pinçon has never pretended to be neutral,’ wrote the socialist mayor of Marseille, Benoît Payan.
/ATS