The collective memory of WWII in France

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What factors have shaped remembering of the Second World War in France in the six decades since 1945?

During the so-called ‘dark years’ of 1940-1944, the French nation was subjected to a contradictory array of external impositions, indigenously wrought tribulations and bitter-sweet triumphs[1]. On the one hand, the Third Republic was rapidly and comprehensively defeated in May-June 1940 – a humiliation referred to by Marc Bloch as a ‘strange defeat’– and for the next four years French soil became witness to the indignity of Petainism, along with the abhorrent culmination of natively incubated anti-Semitism at Vel d’Hiv[2]. On the other, resistance groups played an integral role in the liberation of 1944, and, ultimately, France emerged from the war as a victorious power[3]. In light of this ambiguous and controversial historical heritage, it is perhaps no surprise that collective memory of the war in France has been defined by the existence of competing and contested narratives[4]. As the Fourth Republic dissolved into the Fifth, a narrow Gaullist interpretation of the war came to dominate national remembering[5]. However, the proliferation of academic and cultural challenges to the ‘myth of resistance’ since the spring of 1968, the most famous of which remains Marcel Ophuls’ 1970 documentary ‘Le Chargin et la Pitie’, has given increasing prominence to the crimes of the Vichy regime in French memory[6].

The author suggests that, over the past six decades, collective memory of the Second World War in France has been centrally implicated in, and influenced by, wider socio-political debates relating to the nature of French national identity.

The discourse will be structured in a manner which engages with the primary vectors of French memory regarding ‘les annes noires’. The first section will examine the importance of the resistance to post-war identity in France. Section two will focus on the impact of wartime collaboration on the French psyche.

i) (Re)constructing French National Identity: Resistance

“If de Gaulle hadn’t existed, we would have created him”
An un-named delegate of the Metropolitan Resistance Group[7]

Since the French Revolution of 1789 there has been a marked tendency, amongst scholars and policymakers alike, to conceptualise French history in terms of stages of decline, fall and renewal. This cyclical narrative, which enjoyed unprecedented historiographical and cultural pre-eminence up until the 1970s, is fundamental to understanding the different contours of French national memory pertaining to the Second World War[8]. In a post-war Gaullist context, although not necessarily exclusively so, the fall of 1940 was seen to be indicative of the decadence and decline of the Third Republic, whereas the heroic exploits of the resistance and eventual liberation represented a phoenix moment of national revival[9]. As Raoul Girardet points out, this trope has been “embedded in constructions of French national identity” and has “consistently been used to considerable effect in the political discourse”[10]. Indeed, the largely consensual collective memory of the war which materialised after 1944 was intrinsically linked to attempts by certain sections of the French elite – most conspicuously De Gaulle and his followers – to establish internal political legitimacy, whilst simultaneously restoring French Grandeur. Such a task required the development of two mutually reinforcing and interpenetrating ‘mythologies’[11].

The first of these took the form of the Gaullist ‘myth of resistance’, a memory-narrative which had its genesis in the post-liberation period – reaching its zenith during the 1950s and 1960s – but which remains a ubiquitous component of French remembering[12]. Successive post-war French leaders, mindful of the often brutally nihilistic acts of retribution carried out against alleged collaborators throughout 1944-45, were acutely sensitive to the potential for the division of the occupation years to create a barrier to national renewal[13]. There was an interest, therefore, in offering the French “a unitary and unifying mirror of their immediate past”[14]. The Gaullist myth, with its inclusive notion of the entire French nation pitted in a noble struggle against the German invader, certainly fulfilled this criterion. Rather than being a uniquely Gallic phenomenon, Vichy was cast as a temporary and foreign aberration, and collaboration as the retreat of a few reactionaries and undesirables[15]. Richard Goslan observes that this papering over of the more noxious elements of France’s wartime past, in tandem with the elevation of a mythic story with its own imagery and heroes to the centre of national memory, was “crucial to…national recovery and to France’s ability to view itself in a positive…light”[16]. The primary appeal of such a depiction of the war, on both a political and socio-psychological level, lay in its externalisation of responsibility for the injustices perpetrated during the occupation solely onto the Germans. This was arguably reflected by the limited scope of the épuration, as well as the emphasis given to treason, as opposed to racial persecution, during the trials of Laval, Petain, and other Vichyite luminaries[17].

A second, yet equally influential, myth which impressed itself upon French memory after the war was that of ‘self liberation’. This account explicitly sought to downplay the participation of Allied nations in the liberation of France, presenting the victory of 1944-45 as an almost exclusively home-grown salvation[18]. De Gaulle’s characteristically uncompromising position on this subject was evident as early as August 1944 – “Paris liberated! Liberated by itself, liberated by its people…with the support and help of all France”[19]. As Lagrou notes, being liberated, in contrast to liberating oneself, is “too passive a mode to celebrate the recovery of national independence, and gratitude is a weak basis for national identity”[20]. The self-liberation myth, however, was not just a Gaullist project. A climate of anti-Americanism, which was symptomatic of post-war European leftist groups, was a key facilitator of its perpetuation[21]. Crucially, the ignominy of having to play third fiddle to the Americans and British during the ‘dark years’, and the pre-occupation with maintaining international autonomy which this imbued amongst policymakers, had a substantial impact on French memory, directly guiding France’s post-war foreign policy[22]. The decision to pursue an independent nuclear deterrent, the French veto of the British request to join the ECC, the 1966 withdrawal from the command structures of NATO, and President Mitterrand’s forceful condemnation of the Reykjavik Summit, can all be viewed within this context[23].

In addition to promoting national reconciliation and independence there was a desire on the part of the Gaullist establishment to appropriate the mantle of resistance and disassociate the Fourth and Fifth Republic from the Third, thereby substantiating its own authority[24]. Nevertheless, despite the successful marginalisation of the role played by the (mostly communist) internal resistance after the war, it would be an abstraction to suggest that the vectors of French memory which conform to the ‘La Resistance’ are entirely a Gaullist construct. Somewhat counter-intuitively, the organised left, in concert with high-profile intellectuals such as Jean-Paul Sartre and Albert Camus, were implicit in the instrumentalisation of the resistance’s legacy and as a result in strengthening the hegemony of De Gaulle’s interpretation of the war[25]. The PCF, for instance, brazenly exploited its association with the resistance by referring to itself as the “party of 75,000 shot”[26].

It is pertinent to note that the persistence of the resistance ‘image’ in French memory can to a considerable degree be viewed as a consequence, as well as a source, of France’s specific post-war socio-political context. The challenges posed by decolonisation in Indochina and Algeria, together with the difficulties involved in adjusting to the new international political dynamics of the Cold War, relegated the conflicts of 1940-1944 to the margins of national consciousness[27]. At the same time, the pinnacle of the resistance myth’s stranglehold on public and political discourses – the potency of which was highlighted by the socio-ideological conformity manifest in the transfer of Jean Moulin’s ashes to the Parthéon in 1964 [28] – coincided with an extensive period of economic expansion known as les trentes glorieuses. According to Wood, this instilled the French with a positive self-image and provided a “central mechanism of national cohesion”. Repression of the more problematic aspects of France’s wartime experience thus became much easier[29]. That is not to say that the political utility of these myths has diminished in a contemporary setting. On the contrary, the tensions caused by the fragmentation of French society along ethnic, religious, and political lines over the past three decades have led to their ongoing inclusion in debates concerning French national identity[30]. Indeed, Nicolas Sarkozy has consistently associated his Presidency with the supposed virtues of the resistance, calling for France to abandon the “posture of repentance” adopted by Jacque Chirac[31].

Although based to a certain extent on tangible realities, the inter-connected memory-narratives of resistance and ‘self-liberation’ are largely symbolic and procedural in nature. They reflect long-standing traditions in French historical thinking and self referential notions of French identity. Moreover, they are implicated in the linking of “the national past and future in a causal relation”[32].

ii) Confronting and Obsessing: Collaboration

“If you had invented a time machine and offered to rent it to us, I’m not sure that we would have accepted”
Marcel Ophuls[33]

Over the past six decades, the relationship between collaboration and French collective memory has been tumultuous. In attempting to synchronise the character of Petain’s regime with the grand continuum of French history, scholars have variously suggested that Vichy was a “curious interlude”, an “aberration in the evolution of the French Republic”, or a more insidious product of the political divisions which plagued inter-war France. The hegemony of the Gaullist myth in the immediate post-war period ensured that memory of Vichy remained peripheral and, as a result of the ensuing intellectual vacuum this left, largely sanitised[34]. During the 1970s, however, a profusion of challenges to this ‘amnesia’ emerged which fundamentally transformed public memory of the occupation[35]. The release of Ophuls’ iconoclastic documentary, ‘La Chargin et la Pitie’, shattered the widely-held belief that the entire French nation had been united in resistance against the Germans[36]. Similarly, Robert Paxton’s monograph, ‘Vichy France: Old Guard and New Order’, undermined the thesis that Petain had acted as the ‘shield’ to De Gaulle’s ‘sword’, instead arguing that the Vichy government had actively collaborated with the Nazis[37]. A series of unremitting judicial and political scandals in the following decades – most notably the trials of Touvier and Papon, along with the controversy surrounding Mitterrand’s connection to former Vichy police chief René Bousquet – further shifted Vichy to the centre of French remembering[38]. Indeed, this led Henry Rousso to postulate that by the late eighties French memory had come to be afflicted by a so-called ‘Vichy Syndrome’[39].

There is little doubt that the swiftness of De Gaulle’s departure from high office in 1969, in tandem with his death the following year, contributed significantly to the disintegration of the national consensus regarding 1940-1944. For instance, the liberalisation of French state television, which occurred after, and possibly as a result of, his death, was pivotal in exposing the public to a more nuanced view of the war years[40]. Whilst the absence of the General from contemporary national life was intellectually liberating from a politico-bureaucratic point of view, it was perhaps the disappearance of the physical embodiment of La Resistance which had the biggest impact on French memory – a process compounded by the continued electoral demise of the PCF[41].

What really began to “crack the mirror”, as Rousso puts it, were the monumental student protests and industrial stoppages of May 1968. A generation of students and workers, who had no direct temporal connection to the war, nor any vested interest in sustaining a politically expedient image of the occupation, began to question, amongst other things, the quietism which permeated representations of Vichy. The “repudiation of a certain type of society”, therefore, necessarily involved the refutation of a “certain vision of its history”[42]. The effects of this “cultural time bomb” on the progression of national memory have, in recent years, been exacerbated by wider structural factors[43]. Indeed, the increasing fascination with Vichy has to all intents and purposes overlapped with a “low-ebb in national self-esteem”. Mass immigration and debates over the changing nature of French identity have not only added to a sense of “national malaise” and social division, they have also diluted the authority of a monolithic interpretation of the past, whilst adding greater multiplicity to collective memory in general[44]. The communal introspection which this encourages has arguably led to a negative feedback loop which problematises the relationship between French memory and identity. The ‘Vichy Syndrome’ – which in part emerged as a response to particular social conditions – has obscured the constructive role played by French forces in the Allied war effort – a conception which in itself had formed an important constituent of France’s positive post-war image[45].

Domestic considerations aside, it is evident that an additional dynamic driving the ongoing French preoccupation with Vichy was the emergence, during the 1960s, of a distinctly Jewish memory of the Second World War[46]. Prior to the 1967 Six Days War – an event which Pierre Nora identifies as the inception of this process – two factors had precluded extensive public interrogation of Vichy’s complicity in the Holocaust[47]. Firstly, there was a failure in most European nations, including France, to recognise the unique injustices suffered by Jews at the hands of the Germans. The experiences of resisters and deportees were often given equal, if not greater, weight to that of Jewish victims. Second, until the 1960s, there was a disinclination amongst Zionists to confront this interpretation. In essence, remembrance of the Shoah was “incompatible with the combative identity of the new state of Israel”[48].

As the edifices which had supported these stances began to crumble, the Holocaust, and in particular the French dimension of it, came to occupy a central position in the French consciousness – culminating with Jacques Chirac’s denunciation in 1995 of the “criminal insanity” of Petain’s regime in supporting the Third Reich’s genocidal policies[49]. The growth in Jewish memory coincided with, and contributed to, an intensification of France’s obsession with Vichy, and, in turn, deepened its post-war identity crisis. As Rousso points out, the lingering malign influence of Vichy has “played an essential if not primary role in the difficulties that the people of France have faced in reconciling themselves to their history” [50]. He further contends that the emphasis on a Judeo-centric understanding of the occupation has, in a detrimental sense, marginalised other narratives. Ironically, Rousso’s own work may have added to this development[51].

The ‘Vichy Syndrome’ in French collective memory is, therefore, reflective of a wider paradigm shift, indicative of post-modern European cultures, which has progressively undermined the constructive connection between the national past and future[52].

Conclusion

Since 1945, collective memory of the Second World War in France has been situated within a broader context of cultural, social, and political contestation concerning French national identity. It has substantially influenced, and in turn been influenced by, contemporary socio-structural conditions. The twin narratives of resistance and ‘self liberation’ were informed by the need to project a positive identity to a domestic and international audience, and provide the foundations for post-war social cohesion, in a manner which related to traditional interpretations of French history. The generational transformation of May 1968, together with the explosion of Jewish memory and wider structural changes in French society during the 1970s, contributed to the weakened potency of these images and the increasing centrality of Vichy in French memory.

The tension between La Resistance and the ‘Vichy Syndrome’ is arguably emblematic of the ambiguities of France’s wartime and post-war experience. In 2002, Jean-Marie Le Pen, the leader of the far-right National Front, stunned the world by reaching the second-round of the French Presidential elections. This result, as well as the public and political response to it, drew attention to the fact that the traumas of France’s wartime past are still very much at the forefront of the national psyche[53]. Remembering, then, does not occur in a vacuum – it is an inherently relational concept. In this sense, collective memory can be seen as a process of negotiation by a nation between its past, present, and future.

 

Bibliography

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Bankwitz PF ‘French Defeat in 1940 and its Reversal in 1944-1945: The Deuxieme Division Blindee’ pp.327-353 in The French Defeat of 1940: Reassessments edited by Joe Blatt (Berghahn Books, Oxford, 1998)

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[1] Goslan RJ ‘The Legacy of World War II in France: Mapping the Discourses of Memory’ pp.73-101 in The Politics of Memory in Post-War Europe edited by RN Lebow et.al (Duke University Press, London, 2006) p.73

[2] see Reynolds D ‘1940: Fulcrum of the Twentieth Century’ pp.325-350 in International Affairs, Vol.66, No.2, April 1990 p.326, also Bloch M Strange Defeat: A Statement of Evidence Written in 1940 (Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1949), and Kedward R ‘La Vie en Bleu: France and the French since 1900’ (Penguin Books, London, 2006) p.245-271

[3] see Bankwitz PF ‘French Defeat in 1940 and its Reversal in 1944-1945: The Deuxieme Division Blindee’ pp.327-353 in The French Defeat of 1940: Reassessments edited by Joe Blatt (Berghahn Books, Oxford, 1998) p.335-342 and p.353

[4] Finney P Remembering the Road to World War Two: International History, National Identity, Collective Memory (Routledge, London, 2011) p.179

[5] Goslan RJ ‘The Legacy of World War II in France’ p.75

[6] Avni O ‘Foreword to the English Language Edition’ pp.vii-xvii in H Rousso The Haunting Past: History, Memory, and Justice in Contemporary France by (University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia, 2002) p.ix-x

[7] Edelman M France: The Birth of the Fourth Republic (Penguin Books, New York, 1944) p.62

[8] Jackson P ‘Post War Politics and the Historiography of French Strategy and Diplomacy Before the Second World War’ pp.870-905 in History Compass, 4/5, 2006 p.870-872

[9] Conan E and H Rousso Vichy: An Ever Present Past (University Press of New England, Hanover, 1998) p.160

[10] Jackson P ‘Post War Politics’ p.872

[11] Gildea R ‘Myth, Memory and Policy in France Since 1945’ pp.59-75 in Memory and Power in Post-War Europe: Studies in the Presence of the Past (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2002) edited by JW Muller p.59-60

[12] see Rousso H The Vichy Syndrome: History and Memory in France since 1944 (Harvard University Press, London, 1990) p.60-97

[13] Larkin M France Since the Popular Front: Government and People 1936-1996 (Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1988) p.124-125

[14] Suleiman SR Crises of Memory and the Second World War (Harvard University Press, London, 2006) p.14

[15] Lagrou P The Legacy of Nazi Occupation: Patriotic Memory and National Recovery in Western Europe 1945-1965 (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2000) p.39

[16] Goslan RJ ‘The Legacy of World War II in France’ p.78-80, quote at p.79

[17] Ibid p.90

[18] Gildea R ‘Myth, Memory and Policy in France Since 1945’ p.60-62

[19] Little A ‘Paris Liberation Myth Erases Allies’ in BBC News, 25th August 2004 http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/3595434.stm (accessed 2nd April 2011)

[20] Lagrou P The Legacy of Nazi Occupation p.39

[21] Kuisel R Seducing the French: The Dilemma of Americanisation (University of California Press, Berkley, 1993) p.48-49

[22] Hoffmann S ‘The Trauma of 1940: A Disaster and its Traces’ pp.354-370 in The French Defeat of 1940: Reassessments edited by Joe Blatt (Berghahn Books, Oxford, 1998) p.365-367

[23] Gildea R ‘Myth, Memory and Policy in France Since 1945’ p.63

[24] Goslan RJ ‘The Legacy of World War II in France’ p.78

[25] Suleiman SR Crises of Memory p.15-17

[26] French Communist Party, Hoffmann S ‘In the Looking Glass’ pp.vii-xxvi in The Sorrow and the Pity: The People of France Under German Occupation (Paladin, St.Albans, 1975) p.xii

[27] Goslan RJ ‘The Legacy of World War II in France’ p.79-80

[28] Hellman J ‘Wounding Memories: Mitterrand, Moulin, Touvier, and the Divine Half-Lie of Resistance’ pp.461-486 in French Historical Studies Vol.19, No.2, Autumn 1995, p.476

[29] Wood N Vectors of Memory: Legacies of Trauma in Post-War Europe (Berg, Oxford, 1999) p.24 and Goslan RJ ‘The Legacy of World War II in France’ p.80

[30] Finney P Remembering the Road to World War Two p.179

[31] see Lichfield J ‘Patriotism and Pride Come First as Sarkozy Takes Power’ in The Independent (London), 17th May 2007 http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/patriotism-and-pride-come-first-as-sarkozy-takes-power-449162.html and Davies L ‘Memories of De Gaulle make Cameron-Sarkozy Talks More Cordiale’ in The Guardian (London), 19th June 2010 http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/jun/18/sarkozy-cameron-talks-degaulle-celebrations (both accessed on 2nd April 2011)

[32] Wood N Vectors of Memory p.31

[33] Rousso H The Vichy Syndrome p.112

[34] Munholland K ‘Wartime France: Remembering Vichy’ pp.801-820 in French Historical Studies Vol.18, No.3, Spring 1994 p.802-804

[35] Goslan RJ ‘The Legacy of World War II in France’ p.80

[36] Fishman S ‘The Power of Myth: Five Recent Works on Vichy France’ pp.666-673 in The Journal of Modern History Vol.67, No.3, Sept 1995 p.666

[37] Paxton R Vichy France: Old Guard and New Order, 1940-1944 (Columbia University Press, New York, 1972) p.51

[38] Rousso H ‘Justice, History and Memory in France: Reflections on the Papon Trial’ pp.277-294 in Politics and the Past: On Repairing Historical Injustices p.279 and p.283

[39] Rousso H The Vichy Syndrome p.132

[40] Hoffmann S ‘In the Looking Glass’ p.x-xi

[41] Goslan RJ ‘The Legacy of World War II in France’ p.81 and Judt T ‘The Past is Another Country: Myth and Memory in Post-War Europe’ pp.157-183 in Memory and Power in Post-War Europe: Studies in the Presence of the Past (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2002) edited by JW Muller p.59-60

[42] Rousso H The Vichy Syndrome p.98

[43] Ibid quote at p.99

[44] Goslan RJ ‘The Legacy of World War II in France’ p.76

[45] Paxton R ‘Foreword’ pp.ix-xiii in Conan E and H Rousso Vichy: An Ever Present Past (University Press of New England, Hanover, 1998) p.xii

[46] Rousso H The Vichy Syndrome p.132

[47] Goslan RJ ‘The Legacy of World War II in France’ p.81

[48] Lagrou P ‘Victims of Genocide and National Memory: Belgium, France and the Netherlands 1945-65’ pp.489-421 in The World War Two Reader edited by G Martel (Routledge, London, 2004) p.409-411

[49] Goslan RJ ‘The Legacy of World War II in France’ p.98

[50] Gordon BM ‘The Vichy Syndrome Problem in History’ pp.495-518 in French Historical Studies Vol.19, No.2, Autumn 1995 p.502

[51] Ibid p.496

[52] see Wood N Vectors of Memory p.1-11

[53] Goslan RJ ‘The Legacy of World War II in France’ p.99

Written by: James Chisem
Written at: Aberystwyth University
Written for: Dr Patrick Finney 
Date written: March 2011

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