France and Fascism

France and Fascism
Title France and Fascism PDF eBook
Author Brian Jenkins
Publisher Routledge
Pages 213
Release 2015-03-24
Genre Political Science
ISBN 1317507258

Download France and Fascism Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

France and Fascism: February 1934 and the Dynamics of Political Crisis is the first English-language book to examine the most significant political event in interwar France: the Paris riots of February 1934. On 6 February 1934, thousands of fascist rioters almost succeeded in bringing down the French democratic regime. The violence prompted the polarisation of French politics as hundreds of thousands of French citizens joined extreme right-wing paramilitary leagues or the left-wing Popular Front coalition. This ‘French civil war’, the first shots of which were fired in February 1934, would come to an end only at the Liberation of France ten years later. The book challenges the assumption that the riots did not pose a serious threat to French democracy by providing a more balanced historical contextualisation of the events. Each chapter follows a distinctive analytical framework, incorporating the latest research in the field on French interwar politics as well as important new investigations into political violence and the dynamics of political crisis. With a direct focus on the actual processes of the unfolding political crisis and the dynamics of the riots themselves, France and Fascism offers a comprehensive analysis which will be of interest to undergraduate and postgraduate students, as well as scholars, in the areas of French history and politics, and fascism and the far right.

French Peasant Fascism

French Peasant Fascism
Title French Peasant Fascism PDF eBook
Author Robert O. Paxton
Publisher Oxford University Press, USA
Pages 257
Release 1997
Genre Fascism
ISBN 0195111893

Download French Peasant Fascism Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

In 1920s France the far-right peasantry wanted an authoritarian and agrarian society. This study examines their singular lack of success and the enduring French perception of themselves as a peasant nation.

Neither Right Nor Left

Neither Right Nor Left
Title Neither Right Nor Left PDF eBook
Author Zeev Sternhell
Publisher Princeton University Press
Pages 462
Release 1996
Genre History
ISBN 9780691006291

Download Neither Right Nor Left Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

"Few books on European history in recent memory have caused such controversy and commotion," wrote Robert Wohl in 1991 in a major review of Neither Right nor Left. Listed by Le Monde as one of the forty most important books published in France during the 1980s, this explosive work asserts that fascism was an important part of the mainstream of European history, not just a temporary development in Germany and Italy but a significant aspect of French culture as well. Neither right nor left, fascism united antibourgeois, antiliberal nationalism, and revolutionary syndicalist thought, each of which joined in reflecting the political culture inherited from eighteenth-century France. From the first, Sternhell's argument generated strong feelings among people who wished to forget the Vichy years, and his themes drew enormous public attention in 1994, as Paul Touvier was condemned for crimes against humanity and a new biography probed President Mitterand's Vichy connections. The author's new preface speaks to the debates of 1994 and reinforces the necessity of acknowledging the past, as President Chirac has recently done on France's behalf.

Reproductions of Banality

Reproductions of Banality
Title Reproductions of Banality PDF eBook
Author Alice Yaeger Kaplan
Publisher U of Minnesota Press
Pages 246
Release 1986
Genre History
ISBN 145290149X

Download Reproductions of Banality Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Reproductions of Banality was first published in 1986. Minnesota Archive Editions uses digital technology to make long-unavailable books once again accessible, and are published unaltered from the original University of Minnesota Press editions. An established fascist state has never existed in France, and after World War II there was a tendency to blame the Nazi Occupation for the presence of fascists within the country. Yet the memory of fascism within their ranks still haunts French intellectuals, and questions about a French version of fascist ideology have returned to the political forefront again and again in the years since the war. In Reproductions of Banality, Alice Yaegar Kaplan investigates the development of fascist ideology as it was manifested in the culture of prewar and Occupied France. Precisely because it existed only in a "gathering" or formative stage, and never achieved the power that brings with it a bureaucratic state apparatus, French fascism never lost its utopian, communal elements, or its consequent aesthetic appeal. Kaplan weighs this fascist aesthetic and its puzzling power of attraction by looking closely at its material remains: the narratives, slogans, newspapers, and film criticism produced by a group of writers who worked in Paris in the 1930s and early 1940s — their "most real moment." These writers include Pierre Drieu la Rochelle, Louis-Ferdinand Celine, Lucien Rebatat, Robert Brasillach, and Maurice Bardeche, as well as two precursors of French fascism, Georges Sorel and the Italian futurist F.T. Marinetti, who made of the airplane an industrial carrier of sexual fantasies and a prime mover in the transit from futurism to fascism. Kaplan's work is grounded in the major Marxist and psychoanalytic theories of fascism and in concepts of banality and mechanical reproduction that draw upon Walter Benjamin. Emphasizing the role played by the new technologies of sight and sound, she is able to suggest the nature of the long-repressed cultural and political climate that produced French fascism, and to show—by implication — that the mass marketing of ideology in democratic states bears a family resemblance to the fascist mode of an earlier time.

Avant-Garde Fascism

Avant-Garde Fascism
Title Avant-Garde Fascism PDF eBook
Author Mark Antliff
Publisher Duke University Press
Pages 380
Release 2007-09-03
Genre Art
ISBN 9780822340348

Download Avant-Garde Fascism Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

An investigation of the central role that theories of the visual arts and creativity played in the development of fascism in France between 1909 and 1939.

A History of Fascism, 1914–1945

A History of Fascism, 1914–1945
Title A History of Fascism, 1914–1945 PDF eBook
Author Stanley G. Payne
Publisher Univ of Wisconsin Press
Pages 636
Release 1996-07-15
Genre History
ISBN 9780299148744

Download A History of Fascism, 1914–1945 Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

“A History of Fascism is an invaluable sourcebook, offering a rare combination of detailed information and thoughtful analysis. It is a masterpiece of comparative history, for the comparisons enhance our understanding of each part of the whole. The term ‘fascist,’ used so freely these days as a pejorative epithet that has nearly lost its meaning, is precisely defined, carefully applied and skillfully explained. The analysis effectively restores the dimension of evil.”—Susan Zuccotti, The Nation “A magisterial, wholly accessible, engaging study. . . . Payne defines fascism as a form of ultranationalism espousing a myth of national rebirth and marked by extreme elitism, mobilization of the masses, exaltation of hierarchy and subordination, oppression of women and an embrace of violence and war as virtues.”—Publishers Weekly

Nationalism, Anti-semitism, and Fascism in France

Nationalism, Anti-semitism, and Fascism in France
Title Nationalism, Anti-semitism, and Fascism in France PDF eBook
Author Michel Winock
Publisher
Pages 351
Release 1998
Genre History
ISBN 9780804732871

Download Nationalism, Anti-semitism, and Fascism in France Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

In a wide-ranging set of essays on political, literary, and cultural figures, this book traces the history of nationalism in France in all its permutations?its myths, obsessions, possibilities, and dangers.