[quote="frecklegirl"]Ooh, there are places to study Japanese in Paris? Where? I'll be studying abroad there next year and I really want to continue studying Japanese but I don't know what universities offer classes. Where did you take yours?[/quote]
I studied Japanese at the
INALCO... and I'm still studying Japanese there actually^^
It's a school located in Paris where you can study about 90 different languages and civilizations, including Japanese (one of the biggest department of the school, with Chinese, Russian and Arabian) ; the program is very complete, including different classes for the language (writing, oral, grammar, translation, exercises...) and the civilization (history, sociology, geography, litterature, politic, music, modern art, classical art, philosophy... but you can't take all, you have to choose :s ). I think it's the only place in Europe with such a wide choice, but the conditions (bad timetables, classrooms too small compared to the number of students [people usually end sitting everywhere on the floor or in the corridors...], high speed of the classes...) are quite hard ; a lot of people (the half..?) give up around Christmas and the number of people succeeding at the exams is quite low (from what people told me and what I saw myself). So, better be very motivated and ready to study and learn a lot in a small amount of time (teachers told us we were learning in two years what Japanese children usually learn in 8 years or so).
The other place where you can study Japanese in Paris is the University
Paris VII Denis Diderot (also called Jussieu) ; I can't tell you much about it, but from what I know, there is some kind of rivality existing between Jussieu and INALCO students^^; (the Japanese cursus is known to be more complete at the INALCO but people also say we are lazy students~ ¬¬)
Of course, all the classes are in French, so better be fluent in this language... ^^;