'Prost's work is a source of inspiration and information for anyone aiming to grasp an understanding of the French Republic. The demonstration of the mulitiplicity of identities throughout the 19th and 20th centuries within French civil society makes this book valuable. The author is clearly aiming to go beyond the beaten track towards a more detailed understanding of French society.'Studies in Ethnicity and Nationalism

Antoine Prost's contributions to French history have enabled us to understand the failure of fascism in France and why the Republic survived the humiliation of occupation and collaboration in the Second World War. He is the pre-eminent historian of civil society in France. For the first time his seminal articles have been translated into English and collected in this single volume. Beginning with his classic account of war memorials, through his pioneering study of the people of a popular quarter of Paris in 1936, and of the troubled history of commemorating the Algerian war, this book expertly takes us through republican representations of war and peace, urban spaces and social identity, and discourse and social conflict in republican France. Amongst this range of topics, Prost considers the notion of social class and deference, the multiple uses of myth, the secularization of religious imagery, the centrality of primary schools in French political culture, and insults as staples of French political rhetoric. Included here are his famous essays 'Verdun' and 'War Memorials of the Great War', which have been hailed as indispensable additions to the study of European cultural history. Also notable is his fascinating investigation of rites de passage in Orleans, which artfully reveals how complex and semiologically rich rites de passage can be.This book is essential reading for anyone wishing to gain a firm understanding of the history of nineteenth and twentieth century France and of the work of one of the most influential cultural historians of our day.
Les mer
Presents a collection of articles by Antoine Prost. This book covers: an account of war memorials; the troubled history of commemorating the Algerian war; republican representations of war and peace; and, discourse and social conflict in republican France. It offers an understanding of the history of nineteenth and twentieth century France.
Les mer
Preface ix Introduction: Antoine Prost and the History of Civil Society 1 Jay Winter I. National Identity 1 War Memorials of the Great War: Monuments to the Fallen 11 2 Verdun: The life of a Site of Memory 45 3 The Contribution of the Republican Primary School to French National Identity 73 4 Representations of War in Inter-War France 93 5 The Algerian War in French Collective Memory 107 II. Identities and Civil Society: Urban Space, Social Identities and Youth 6 The People of Paris: The Eighteenth Arrondissement in 1936 127 7 Celebrating Joan: A Feast of Collective Identity in Orl'ans since the French Revolution 153 8 Marriage, Youth and Society in Orl'ans in 1911 175 9 Youth in Inter-War France 221 III. Identities and the Discourse of Political Conflict 10 Votes and Words 237 11 Workers, Others and the State 257 12 The French Contempt for Politics: The case of Veterans in the Inter-War Period 277 13 The Strikes of 1936: The Occupation of Factories and the Decline of Deference 311 Index 339
Les mer
Also available in hardback, 9781859736210 GBP50.00 (January, 2002)
Also available in hardback, 9781859736210 £50.00 (January, 2002)
Sponsored by the Historial de la grande guerre Péronne-Somme General Editor: Jay Winter, Yale University The series presents original monographs and reprints of important memoirs and accounts of the Great War. Included in the series are essential works of European scholarship previously unavailable in English.
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781859736265
Publisert
2002-01-12
Utgiver
Vendor
Berg Publishers
Høyde
216 mm
Bredde
138 mm
Dybde
15 mm
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
368

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

Antoine Prost Professor Emeritus of History,University of Paris Pantheon-Sorbonne Translated from the French by Jay Winter with Helen McPhail