Jews and gender in liberation France
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Jews and gender in liberation France
(Studies in the social and cultural history of modern warfare)
Cambridge University Press, 2003
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Note
Bibliography: p. 227-258
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This book takes a new look at occupied and liberated France through the dual prism of race, specifically Jewishness, and gender - core components of Vichy ideology. The imagining of liberation and the potential post-Vichy state, lay at the heart of resistance strategy. Their transformation into policy at liberation forms the basis of an enquiry that reveals a society which, while split deeply at the political level, found considerable agreement over questions of race, the family and gender. This is explained through a new analysis of republican assimilation which insists that gender was as important a factor as nationality or ethnicity. A new concept of the 'long liberation' provides a framework for understanding the continuing influence of the liberation in post-war France, where scientific planning came to the fore, but whose exponents were profoundly imbued with reductive beliefs about Jews and women that were familiar during Vichy.
Table of Contents
- List of illustrations
- Abbreviations
- Acknowledgements
- 1. Introduction: the long liberation
- 2. Narrating liberation
- 3. Anticipating liberation: the gendered nation in print
- 4. Limiting liberation: 'the French for France'
- 5. Controlling liberation: Georges Mauco and a population fit for France
- 6. Liberation in place: Jewish women in the city
- 7. Conclusion
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index.
by "Nielsen BookData"