Digital Library
Close Browse articles from a journal
 
<< previous    next >>
     Journal description
       All volumes of the corresponding journal
         All issues of the corresponding volume
           All articles of the corresponding issues
                                       Details for article 15 of 19 found articles
 
 
  Revenge of the fascist knights: Masculine identities in Je suis partout, 1940-1944
 
 
Title: Revenge of the fascist knights: Masculine identities in Je suis partout, 1940-1944
Author: Tumblety, Joan
Appeared in: Modern & contemporary France
Paging: Volume 7 (1999) nr. 1 pages 11-20
Year: 1999-02
Contents: The debacle of 1940 permitted an attack in France both on republican institutions and on republican ideas. Indeed, sections within the radical Right, including the Parisian literary fascists involved with the collaborationist weekly Je suis partout, staged an elaborate revenge on all that the Third Republic had symbolised. The contributors to the newspaper envisaged, not always consciously, that the new European Order would be based not only on such a reinvention of politics but on a reconfiguration of manliness. In this way, they were able simultaneously to blame the swiftness of the French collapse on the inadequate nature of the French male population and to seek a discursive rehabilitation of that same body of men through their narratives. A reading of the fiction and journalism in Je suis partout suggests that such gendered ruminations allowed these authors to reconcile the defeat with their faith in the grandeur of France and its soldiers.
Publisher: Routledge
Source file: Elektronische Wetenschappelijke Tijdschriften
 
 

                             Details for article 15 of 19 found articles
 
<< previous    next >>
 
 Koninklijke Bibliotheek - National Library of the Netherlands