I'm noticing that most verb tenses in this passage are in the present tense. I'm wondering if there's a general rule about when to use the present versus the future tense in this kind of historical account. I see one sentence that says "Plus tard, elle aura son diplome en sciences physiques..." Given that the sentence starts with "plus tard," it makes sense to me that the following verb is in the future tense, but later in the passage I'm seeing "Plus tard, en 1911, Marie recoit le Prix Nobel..." In this case "plus tard" is followed by the present tense. I'm wondering if the choice of tense is stylistic or if there is a subtle difference in meaning or how does one decide which tense is appropriate? Thanks in advance for your help!
Present versus future tense
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Lorie R.Kwiziq community member
Present versus future tense
This question relates to:French interactive reading exercise "Marie Curie"
Listening or Seeing B1, Famous People, Politics, History & Economics, Technology & Science, Reading B1
Asked 4 years ago
It is stylistic. Using the present tense, you take the reader to that time, thereby decreasing the perceived distance between the event and the reader. With future tense you remain in the present and point at something that's happening later, in the future. The perceived temporal distance is larger.
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