ISBN-13: 9781526106599 / Angielski / Miękka / 2016 / 256 str.
ISBN-13: 9781526106599 / Angielski / Miękka / 2016 / 256 str.
From victory to Vichy explores the political culture and mobilisation of the two largest French veterans' associations during the inter-war years, the Union fEdErale (UF) and the Union nationale des combattants (UNC). Drawing on extensive research into the associations' organisation, discourse and tactics, this study revises the established interpretation that French veterans were inherently democratic and supportive of the parliamentary Third Republic.
With approximately 900,000 members each, the UF and the UNC were the giants of the veterans' movement. During the 1920s, the UF and the UNC were often bitterly opposed on points of domestic and foreign policy yet could unite in the cause of veterans' rights. The following decade, though both associations claimed to reject politics, their political action intensified. The UNC fought side by side with nationalists against police during the infamous riot of 6 February 1934. During the subsequent polarisation of French politics, the UF and the UNC sought to expand their influence in the non-veteran milieu through public demonstrations, auxiliary groups, propaganda campaigns and, in the case of the UNC, alliance with the extreme Right. Despite shifting policies and independent initiatives, by the end of the 1930s the UF and the UNC had come together in a campaign for authoritarian political reform, leaving them perfectly placed to become the 'eyes and ears' of Marshal PEtain's Vichy regime.
Offering an original contribution to the history of late Third Republican political culture, From victory to Vichy will appeal to students and scholars of modern France and Europe.