La
petite phrase is
the first French book focusing on political sound bites. However, the Académie
française (French
Academy), the prominent institution in charge of anything pertaining to the
French language, had already coined in its Dictionary a comprehensive
13-word definition: « une formule concise qui sous des dehors anodins
vise à marquer les esprits » (a concise formula which under innocent
outsides aims at leaving a mark on minds). This is a specially efficient
definition. Like the sound bite itself, it says much in few words:- A sound bite is not necessarily
a complete sentence in a grammatical sense: it is a "formula" –
a condensed expression of some rule, as in mathematics, pharmacy and so
on. Think, for example, of Einstein’s
E=MC2: it contains the world! The analogy is accurate: the implicit mission of sound bites is to
show what to do or think in certain circumstances.
- “Petite”, in French, means
“small” or “short”. However, a sound bite is not just short, made of
few words, it is "concise," an adjective that, according to the
Académie française itself, means “which says a lot in few words." The
sound bite contains more than itself.
- A sound bite shows "under
innocent outsides." In the Académie française view, a sound bite is a
3D object: if it has outsides, it must have insides. The wording is not that important: the true message is hidden in the sound bite.
- A sound bite “aims”: it is
driven by it’s own intention. Note this: in the definition,
the subject of the action verb is the sound bite itself, as if it was
animated by a life of its own instead of being a mere expression of its author.
Indeed, quite often, a sound bite will follow its own course, perhaps at its author's regrets. Or, it will hit another target than the intended one.
- The purpose of the sound bite
is to "leave a mark", an impact which lasts, at least for some time. It relates to memory more than intelligence, its goal is not to
convince or to fuel an argument.
- The mark left by the sound bite
bears on “minds”. This word may have many different meanings, but note
that the Académie française chose to use the plural, denoting a collective
character of the sound bite: it is directed generally toward a group, not
an individual.