The embrace of unreason France, 1914-1940

Frederick Brown, 1934-

Book - 2014

"From acclaimed biographer and cultural historian, author of For the Soul of France ("Masterful history...hard to put down."-Henry Kissinger); Zola ("Magnificent." --The New Yorker); andFlaubert ("Impeccable."-James Wood, cover, The New York Times Book Review)-a brilliant reconsideration of the events and the political, social, and religious movements that led to France's embrace of Fascism and anti-Semitism. Frederick Brown explores the tumultuous forces unleashed by the Dreyfus Affair, and examines how the clashing ideologies and the blood-soaked political scandals and artistic movements following the horror of World War I resulted in the country's era of militant authoritarianism; and how riot...ing, violent racism, and nationalistic fervor overtook France's sense of reason, sealed its fate, and led to the rise of the Vichy government. We see how the French intelligentsia turned away from the humanistic traditions and rationalistic ideals of the Enlightenment in favor of submission to authority that stressed patriotism, militarism, and xenophobia; how French conservatives attempted to rebuild and reshape the country's collective identity as the German threat loomed, as mistrust of the parliamentary Republic increased (a result of its illegal financial mismanagement of the building of the Panama Canal, and nostalgia for a monarchial government and the glories of wartime martyrdom); how the generation that came of age in the trenches, under fire, offered a new vision, and saw salvation in the surrender of reason to instinct. Brown masterfully brings to life Europe's-and France's-darkest modern years"--

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Subjects
Published
New York : Alfred A. Knopf 2014.
Language
English
Main Author
Frederick Brown, 1934- (-)
Edition
First Edition
Item Description
"This is a Borzoi Book."--Tp. verso
Physical Description
xi, 345 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780307595157
9780307742360
  • Prologue
  • Part 1.
  • Chapter 1. The Coming of War
  • Chapter 2. The Making of a Xenophobe
  • Chapter 3. The Nightingale of the Carnage
  • Chapter 4. The Battle for Joan
  • Chapter 5. RoyalismÆs Deaf Troubadour
  • Chapter 6. Spy Mania and Postwar Revenge
  • Part 2.
  • Chapter 7. Scars of the Trenches
  • Chapter 8. The Rapture of the Deep
  • Chapter 9. The Stavisky Affair
  • Chapter 10. The Congress of Writers for the Defense of Culture
  • Chapter 11. Totalitarian Pavilions
  • Chapter 12. The Hero of Verdun
  • Epilogue
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Principals
  • Chronology
  • Index
Review by Choice Review

Brown alternates between literary biography of three prominent far-right French intellectuals--Maurice Barres, Charles Maurras, and Pierre Drieu La Rochelle--and broader discussion of the political and cultural malaise that gripped France from the fin de siecle to the catastrophic defeat of 1940. Despite the dates indicated in the subtitle, nearly half of the book is devoted to the period from the 1880s to 1914. Brown's protagonists come across as more pathetic than sinister in their efforts to win literary fame, build alliances, and denounce the decadence of the modern age. Brown also discusses the careers of various other intellectuals of the period and vividly describes momentous events such as the rise and fall of General Boulanger, the riots of February 6, 1934, and the 1937 Paris Exposition. However, the lack of endnotes and bibliography hampers the utility of the book to scholars, and Brown does not engage with the substantial body of scholarship on the French far right of the fin de siecle and early 20th century. Nevertheless, he is a lively narrator, and general readers may find this book an engaging introduction to the period. Summing Up: Recommended. General collections, public libraries. D. A. Harvey New College of Florida

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* Notwithstanding the cultural brilliance of the Belle Epoque, the first half of the twentieth century was, in many ways, disastrous for France. It included the physical and human destruction of the Great War, the failed diplomacy of the interwar years, the rapid military collapse in WWII, and the shame of the Vichy regime. As this superb study reveals, these disasters were directly linked to a political and cultural rot that permeated all levels of French society. On the eve of WWI, France was still racked by unresolved issues carried over from the previous decades. The hatreds engendered by the Dreyfus affair, the conflicts between Catholics and secularists, and the riffs between staunch republicans and monarchists were still fought out in the popular press, literary organs, and sometimes in the streets. On a more fundamental level, Brown describes a retreat from the rationalism of the Enlightenment and an embrace of emotionalism and romantic nostalgia among French elites. This was manifested in an exclusionary nationalism, virulent anti-Semitism, and a general distrust of pluralistic democracy. This is a riveting portrait of a society weakened by internal decay.--Freeman, Jay Copyright 2014 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

After the 1870 concession of Alsace and Lorraine to Germany and the attendant drop in national morale, France began another political, societal, and artistic descent into instability. Brown (Zola) relies on lengthy biographical narratives of bloodthirsty socialist and nationalist Maurice Barres, fervent nationalist and royalist Charles Maurras, and other writer-activists to flesh out the larger story behind major 20th century French movements, resulting in mostly stand-alone sections best for readers already familiar with the key figures. Throughout, the fallout from the Dreyfus Affair and related anti-Semitism permeates the political sections even as many deplored the government's public mishandling of the young man erroneously thrust into the center of the treason-based scandal. Simultaneously, widely divergent groups co-opted the quest for Joan of Arc's canonization in the heat of thickening nationalist sentiment. Brown further illustrates the collective descent, as political murderers walked free and artists gleefully created prank-filled Dada pieces and Surrealist art. Brown's version of France makes its occupation by longtime adversary and National Socialist Germany a nearly foregone conclusion. 51 illus. Agent: Georges Borchardt. (Apr.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The author of Zola (1995) and Flaubert (2006) once again demonstrates his profound knowledge of French history, its people and their psyche. Brown's Soul of France: Culture Wars in the Age of Dreyfus (2010) showed France's struggle from the revolution into the Third Republic. Here, the author digs even deeper in the fight for minds beginning with the effects of the Franco-Prussian War of 1870-1871. The rise of xenophobia after the loss of Alsace-Lorraine was as much an indication of anti-Semitism as anything else. The Third Republic, with its revolving door of ministers, only exacerbated the rise of extremists. Maurice Barrs, a dedicated Boulangist, was radicalized by the Panama Canal Company scandal and the Dreyfus Affair, and he blamed the Jewish syndicate. Together with Charles Maurras, he founded Action Franaise, a monarchist newspaper that attempted to destroy every political adversary with slander campaigns. As editor in chief, Lon Daudet completed the unholy trinity devoted to yellow journalism, using fear as the weapon of choice. His youth organization, the Camelots du Roi, was only one of the militant leagues that turned demonstrations into blood baths. The onset of World War I further fed the young intellectuals' fears and obsessions, and Joan of Arc became their symbol of patriotism. Men like Pierre Drieu, who marched to war with the works of Nietzsche in his knapsack, and Andr Breton led the surrealists in their quest for the annihilation of being. Brown explores all the great and complicated minds of this period, including socialists, communists, fascists, royalists and radicals. Francophiles will love this book, but the roiling currents of philosophical and political ideas may daunt some readers. Read this illuminating book to see frightening similarities to the early years of the 21st century. The lies, innuendo, invented evidence and baseless arguments are all too familiar.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Excerpted from the Hardcover Edition Prologue Until recent times, the French political imagination was disposed to associate its dogmas and enthusiasms with the symbol of the tree. In 1792, revolutionaries at war with monarchical Europe planted " arbres de la liberté " in towns and villages throughout the country, taking their cue from the American patriots who had rallied for independence at a famous elm near the Boston Common. Among the hundreds that dotted Paris (mostly poplars, which grew quickly and had the further advantage of deriving etymologically from the Latin populus), one was planted within view of the royal palace in a ceremony over which the king himself presided, under duress. It was cut down several years later, not long after Louis XVI had been guillotined, despite the chief judge's pronouncement at Louis's trial that "the tree of liberty grows only when watered by the blood of tyrants." Otherwise, cutting down a liberty tree under the new dispensation was tantamount to profaning the host under the old regime and punished accordingly. When a villager felled one in the Vaucluse, sixty-three neighbors who concealed his identity paid the forfeit, exemplifying Robespierre's notorious oxymoron, "the despotism of liberty." They were killed, their houses were burned, and their fields were salted. As the Revolution understood freedom to be a universal birthright, liberty trees did not require native soil. They grew in land conquered by the Republic beyond the Rhine and, abroad, in the Caribbean colonies, where their proximity to slave markets before the abolition of slavery, in 1794, was noted by one derisive observer.* Far from preserving the original character of trees planted under revolutionary auspices, Napoleon, who came out of the Revolution, allowed them to survive as "arbres Napoléon" while discouraging cer- emonies that glorified the advent of liberty. They numbered at least sixty thousand when Louis XVIII mounted the throne of a restored monarchy. Seen thenceforth as culpable mementos of a hiatus in the the Bourbon succession, liberty trees were harvested for firewood or furniture. With the overthrow of Louis-Philippe in 1848 and the establishment of the Second Republic, maypoles reappeared in plantings that sur- passed the exuberance of eighteenth-century celebrations. "The plantings had multiplied a hundredfold," wrote a chronicler. "They were to be seen at all the markets, squares, quays, gardens, intersections, and even in the courtyards of public institutions, at the Prefecture of Police, at the Opéra, etc. Patriotic songs, religious ceremonies, speeches, music, the national guard, acclamations, flowers, ribbons, the discharge of weapons, the curious crowd made for a lively spectacle." As Louis XVI had been pressed into service in the early 1790s, so now Victor Hugo, deputy mayor of the 9th arrondissement, presided over the planting of a poplar on the Place des Vosges, where he resided. Priests were invited to water saplings with their silver aspergillums. Those thousands of well-watered saplings were given no nourishment once the Second Republic was overthrown by the future Napoleon III, in 1851. They withered during the Second Empire, but their right-wing analogue sprang to life several decades later, after the Franco-Prussian War of 1870 to 1871, not in a material sense but as a trope signifying national and racial authenticity. Of paramount importance was the publication in 1897 of Les Déracinés (The Uprooted), a novel that follows seven young Lorrainers torn from their cultural roots and sent into the world as existential waifs by a teacher of philosophy pledged to Kantian universals. "Alas, Lorraine undertook a great enterprise," wrote Maurice Barrès, who had made his name not only as a novelist but as a politician militantly championing the would-be dictator General Georges Bou- langer. "She deported a certain number of her sons from Neufchâteau, from Nomeny, from Custines, from Varennes, so that they might rise to a superior ideal. The thought was that by elevating the seven young Lorrainers from their native grounds to France, and even to humanity, they would be brought closer to reason. . . . Did those who directed this emigration realize that they had charge of souls? Did they perceive the dangerous gravity of their act? They couldn't 'replant' the uprooted in congenial earth. Not knowing whether they wanted to make them citizens of humanity or Frenchmen of France, they evicted them from sturdy, age-old homes and let the denless cubs fend for themselves. From their natural order, humble perhaps but social, they blundered into anarchy, into mortal disorder." The soul, which thrived on neces- sity rather than freedom and owed its consecration to forebears buried in the soil of one's homeland, could not be transplanted. It was rooted rather than intellectual, organic rather than abstract, collective rather than individual. It was the pith that showed intelligence to be "a very small thing on the surface of ourselves." It was to Frenchmen what der- elict country churches were in the secular, bourgeois state to la France profonde. Its virtue lent itself to many of the evils of the twentieth century. In novels, essays, and articles, the prolific Barrès did much to shape opinion during the Dreyfus Affair and the war of 1914-1918, expounding the view as eloquently as any of his ideological confrères that diasporic Jews with shallow roots were susceptible of treason, glorifying the brother- hood of men in trenches, consecrating the blood they shed on fields shorn of trees, and generally reviling the Enlightenment. These were not his pieties alone. They became the accepted wisdom of the Right and echoed across the decades, from war to war. In the seventeenth century, Blaise Pascal had observed ironically, "What is truth on one side of the Pyrenees is error on the other." But in 1940 Marshal Pétain, justifying his pact with Hitler and the invention of a satellite state in the face of de Gaulle's exhortations from England to resist, assured his compatriots without a trace of irony that the soil on which he stood like a deeply rooted tree vouched for his authority: "The earth does not lie; it will be your refuge." Suffice it to say that unreason had its apostles on the Far Left as well as the Far Right after the catastrophe of World War I, in every intellectual community that regarded "salvation" as the supreme goal of the human community. That will be the subject of other chapters. * Slavery was restored in 1802 by the Consulate, under Napoleon. Excerpted from The Embrace of Unreason: France, 1914-1940 by Frederick Brown All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.