Free Novel Read

B006NTJT4U EBOK




  France The Dark Years 1940–1944

  France

  The Dark Years 1940–1944

  Julian Jackson

  Great Clarendon Street, Oxford OX2 6DP

  Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford.

  It furthers the University’s objective of excellence in research, scholarship,

  and education by publishing worldwide in

  Oxford New York

  Auckland Bangkok Buenos Aires Cape Town Chennai

  Dar es Salaam Delhi Hong Kong Istanbul Karachi Kolkata

  Kuala Lumpur Madrid Melbourne Mexico City Mumbai Nairobi

  São Paulo Shanghai Taipei Tokyo Toronto

  Oxford is a registered trade mark of Oxford University Press

  in the UK and certain other countries

  Published in the United States

  by Oxford University Press Inc., New York

  © Julian Jackson 2001

  The moral rights of the author have been asserted

  Database right Oxford University Press (maker)

  First published 2001

  First published in paperbook 2003

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced,

  stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means,

  without the prior permission in writing of Oxford University Press

  or as expressly permitted by law, or under terms agreed with the appropriate

  reprographics rights organizations. Enquiries concerning reproduction

  outside the scope of the above should be sent to the Rights Department,

  Oxford University Press, at the address above

  You must not circulate this book in any other binding or cover

  and you must impose the same condition on any acquirer

  British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data

  Data available

  Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data

  Data available

  ISBN 0-19-820706-9 (hbk)

  ISBN 0-19-925457-5 (pbk)

  10 9 8 7 6 5 4

  Typeset by SNP Best-set Typesetter Ltd., Hong Kong

  Printed in Great Britain

  on acid-free paper by

  Biddles Ltd,

  Kings Lynn, Norfolk

  To the Memory of My Mother

  Preface

  This book is inspired by the conviction that the time is ripe for a new history of France during the German Occupation. The last general history of this subject, by the French historian Jean-Pierre Azéma, appeared in 1973, but in the twenty-seven years since then a huge amount of research has taken place. My ambition in writing this study is to offer a new interpretative synthesis which takes account of the massive quantity of new work. What this means, therefore, is that this book could not have been written without the pioneering archival work of innumerable other historians. I hope that I have made my debts to them clear in the footnotes, but I would like to take the opportunity in this preface to mention by name some of those historians whose work has been of particular inspiration and stimulation to me: Philippe Burrin, Luc Capdevila, Daniel Cordier, Jean-Louis Crémieux-Brilhac, Laurent Douzou, Jean-Marie Guillon, Stanley Hoffmann, Roderick Kedward, Pierre Laborie, François Marcot, Robert Paxton, Denis Peschanski, Henry Rousso, Gisèle Sapiro, John Sweets, Olivier Wieviorka.

  It can be seen that the majority of names on this list are French, and this fact perhaps needs underlining given the seemingly ineradicable belief outside France (and indeed sometimes in France as well) that the French are still unwilling to ‘face up’ to their past. While writing this book I lost count of the number of people who wanted to tell me about France’s voluntary amnesia about the Occupation and her predeliction for believing in heroic legends about the Resistance. The problem with such comments is not only the unwarranted condescension which underlies them—the assumption is that ‘we’, the British, would have faced up to things much better in similar circumstances—but also the fact that they are so patently false. It is true that the first important studies of the Vichy regime came from outside France, but French historians caught up long ago. Far from being years which French historians avoid, the Vichy period is probably at present the most intensively researched in French history even if it is difficult to say how far, and in what ways, the findings of the scholarly community have penetrated to the wider public. If anything, however, popular views of the Occupation in France have become excessively fixated on collaboration and anti-semitism while the most recent scholarly research has tended to focus again on the Resistance after some years of neglect. One of my aims in this book is also to bring the Resistance back into the picture while not in any way underplaying the bleaker aspects of the period.

  I am most grateful to Tony Morris, formerly of OUP, for having encouraged me to write this book and supporting it so enthusiastically. When I told him that I wanted to write a short book about Vichy, he told me that I should think about writing something more ambitious. I am glad that I followed his advice, but if readers find this book too long, he must share part of the blame. Thanks also to Ruth Parr, Tony Morris’s successor at OUP, for continuing to back a project that was not originally her own, to Michael Watson for seeing it through the production process, and to Rowena Anketell for her extraordinarily efficient copy-editing. Much of the research for this book was carried out in the library of the Institut d’histoire du temps présent, and I am especially grateful for the helpfulness of the librarian Jean Astruc. I would also like to thank the staff of the BDIC library at Nanterre. One beneficial side-effect of the last stages of my research was that I even came to appreciate, if not to love, the new Bibliothèque de France: perhaps affection will come with time. I would also like to record my thanks to David Eastwood, my head of Department, who has given my work on this book such support, and has managed in our Department to preserve such a civilized and good humoured working atmosphere even in this unpleasant period of Blairo-Thatcherite permanent revolution in British universities.

  I would also like to thank Frank Cherbé for his encouragement and for providing me with huge amounts of material about the reporting of the Papon trial in France. Eleanor Breuning was kind enough to help me proof read the entire text: her heroic efforts saved me from numerous solecisms. Three people kindly read the manuscript at earlier stages. Patrick Higgins read quite a lot of an early draft. His careful reading showed me how much more work there was to be done. But my debt to Patrick is much deeper than that. I have learnt so much from him in our twenty years of friendship, and one day I hope I will know half as much history as he does. Roderick Kedward read the whole of the finished manuscript and made numerous helpful suggestions. His encouragement has been very important to me, and the stimulus which his work and inspiration has given to the study of Vichy and the French Resistance in Britain is quite incalculable. Kevin Passmore read the manuscript at too late a stage to be able to make many detailed comments, but I tried to take on board those suggestions which he did permit himself to make. More generally, however, he has taught me a huge amount about inter-war French politics both in his writing and in our many conversations. Having him as a colleague in a university close to my own has been very important.

  Finally, and most importantly, I would like to thank Douglas who has lived in closer proximity to this book than he would probably have liked at times. Unfortunately there are few activities that render one more self-centred and selfish than writing a book. I shall try harder to overcome this next time, but in the meantime I can only record my heartfelt gratitude for everything that 1 owe him.

  Swansea, July 2000

  Contents

  List of Maps and Figure

  Abbreviations />
  Introduction Historians and the Occupation

  Ambiguities

  Péguy’s Frances

  1945–1965: The Resistance writes its History

  1970s: Enter the Vichy Regime

  1980s: From Regime to Society

  Le Grand Absent: The Jews

  1990s: The Resistance Returns

  Part I Anticipations

  Introduction

  1 The Shadow of War: Cultural Anxieties and Modern Nightmares

  Verdun: The Soldier-Peasant

  Dénatalité: The Disappearance of France

  Old Mother or New Woman?

  America: Scenes of the Future

  Le Rappel à l’ordre: The New Classicism

  Modernist Nightmares: Morand and Céline

  2 Rethinking the Republic: 1890–1934

  Before 1914: ‘La Fin des notables?’

  The 1920s: The Maurrassian Moment

  1919–1928: Missed Opportunities?

  The ‘Jeunes Équipes’: 1928–1930

  The Tardieu Moment: 1930

  The Nonconformists: Liberalism Contested 1932–1934

  3 Class War/Civil War

  The 1920s: Defending the Bourgeois Republic

  Fragile Consensus: 1926–1932

  The Depression

  The 1930s Crisis: The Right’s Response

  The 1930s Crisis: The Left’s Response

  The Consequences of the Popular Front

  4 The German Problem

  From Caillautism to Briandism: The Pragmatic Tradition

  The Pacifist Consensus

  Rethinking Pacifism: The Impact of Hitler

  From Anti-Communism to Conservative Neo-Pacifism

  After Munich: A New Sweden?

  5 The Daladier Moment: Prelude to Vichy or Republican Revival?

  After Munich: Anti-Communism and Imperialism

  Daladier: The Authoritarian Republic

  Foreigners and Jews

  Race and the Republican Tradition

  6 The Debacle

  Causes and Consequences

  Drôle de guerre and Anti-Communism

  Defeat and Exodus

  Armistice or Capitulation?

  Enter Pétain

  The Armistice

  Enter Laval: The End of the Republic

  Was Vichy ‘Legal’?

  Part II The Regime: National Revolution and Collaboration

  Introduction

  7 The National Revolution

  Vichy Governments

  The National Revolution: Doctrine

  The National Revolution: Sources

  Conflicts I: Education

  Conflicts II: State and Society: The Fascist Temptation

  Conflicts III: The Economy

  8 Collaboration

  Jean Moulin: Collaborator

  Involuntary Collaboration/Voluntary Collaboration

  German Polyocracy: ‘What a lot of authorities’

  Initiating Collaboration: Montoire

  13 December: The Fall of Laval

  The British Connection

  Relaunching Collaboration: The Protocols of Paris

  After the Protocols: Collaboration goes on

  Economic Collaboration

  9 Collaborationism

  Fanatics, Criminals and Adventurers

  Frères-Ennemis: Doriot and Déat

  The Rank and File

  Leftist Collaborationism

  Circles of Influence

  Collaboration as Hatred and Fraternity: Je suis partout

  Drieu’s NRF: Literary Collaborationism

  Drieu: Collaborationism as Self-Hatred

  10 Laval in Power 1942–1943

  The Authoritarian Republic

  Tightening the Screw: Oberg, Sauckel, Dannecker, Röthke

  The Vel d’Hiv:

  July 1942 217 The Collaborationists Attack

  The North African Imbroglio

  Vichy 1943: Shrinking Power

  Towards Terror: The Milice

  Endgame

  Collaboration: The Balance Sheet

  Part III Vichy, the Germans, and the French People

  Introduction

  11 Propaganda, Policing, and Administration

  Balkanization

  Other Maps

  Selling the National Revolution: Propaganda

  Intermediaries

  Repression and Administration

  The Prefects: ‘Propagandists of Truth’

  The Church: ‘Loyalty without Enthralment’

  12 Public Opinion, Vichy, and the Germans

  Public Opinion: From Disenchantment to Opposition

  The Pétain Cult

  Private Lives

  Responding to the Germans

  The Sociology of Opinion: Notables and Peasants

  The Sociology of Opinion: Business

  The Sociology of Opinion: The Workers

  13 Intellectuals, Artists, and Entertainers

  Reputations

  Culture under Vichy

  German Ambiguities

  Glittering Paris: Temptations and Sophistries

  Continuing France

  The Cinema: Ambiguities and Paradoxes

  14 Reconstructing Mankind

  Moral Hygiene/Social Hygiene

  Family Values

  Women, Vichy, and the Germans

  Remaking the Young: Aspirations and Reality

  Uriage: A Pétainist Deviation?

  ‘Pockets of Health’ (Mounier)

  Twentieth-Century Utopia: An Architect at Vichy

  Utopian Communities: An Economist at Vichy

  15 Vichy and the Jews

  Emulative Zeal: Vichy Anti-Semitism/Nazi Anti-Semitism

  The Holocaust in France

  Jewish Responses: French and Immigrants

  Jewish Resistance

  French Society and the Jews 1940–1942: Indifference and Hostility

  French Society and the Jews 1942–1944: Solidarity and Rescue

  Part IV The Resistance

  Introduction

  16 The Free French 1940–1942

  Beginnings

  Conflict: De Gaulle and his Allies

  The National Committee

  De Gaulle’s Ideology

  De Gaulle and the French

  17 The Resistance 1940–1942

  Personalities

  Glimmers in the Night

  Consolidation I: Movements and Networks

  Consolidation II: North and South

  Towards Ideology

  Other Voices I: Catholics and Socialists

  Other Voices II: The Communists

  Towards Unity

  18 De Gaulle and the Resistance 1942

  Moulin’s Plan

  The Resistance and London: First Contacts

  Moulin and the Resistance

  The Resistance: Geography and Sociology

  Resistance and the Population: How to Resist?

  Competitors

  19 Power Struggles 1943

  Moulin, Brossolette, and the Movements

  Moulin’s Victory: The CNR

  De Gaulle and Giraud

  After Caluire: The Resistance Fights Back

  Communist Policy

  Responding to the Communists

  Communist Infiltration?

  20 Resistance in Society

  Diversification and Radicalization

  The Disintegration of Vichy

  The Maquis

  The Peasantry and the Resistance

  Women in the Resistance

  Foreigners in the Resistance

  Recruiting the Professions: Communists and Writers

  Bringing in the Workers: National Insurrection

  21 Remaking France

  Vichy and the Resistance: Shared Values

  Pétaino-Resisters: An Abortive Third Way

  The New Elite

  Making Plans