Knight-Monks of Vichy France: Uriage, 1940-1945

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McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP, Mar 9, 1993 - History - 344 pages
In The Knight-Monks of Vichy France John Hellman describes the founding, operation, transformation, and demise of the school, details the institution's ideological and political struggles with other segments of French society, and deals with the remarkable rise of Uriage ideas and alumni in postwar France. By focusing on the social, philosophical, and psychological concepts propounded by the staff of the school, Hellman has produced the first study that shows the École Nationale des Cadres d'Uriage to have been an original educational and group experience which inspired French youth from very different backgrounds to abandon the liberal democratic tradition for a new political and social vision. Drawing on a variety of sources, including interviews, newly available archival material, Vichy publications, correspondence, and diary entries, Hellman contributes to the current, lively debate concerning the phenomenon of collaboration and the response of the French population to fascism and to the occupation during the Second World War. This book will be of particular interest to readers concerned with the intellectual and political life of modern France, modern religious thought and experience, fascism and the Vichy regime, changes in France in the prewar and postwar periods, and the "third way" political option in contemporary Europe.
 

Contents

French Catholic Intellectuals and the Ideological Origins of the Vichy Regime
3
1 Beginnings
15
2 BeuveMéry the Research Department and the Knightly Order
45
3 The Uriage Experience
68
Jeunesse France Marche and the Regional Schools
93
The Équipe Nationale Économie et Humanisme the Scouts and Compagnons
117
6 The Struggle for Youth
139
7 Uriage under Attack March 1942January 1943
163
8 Exile from the Castle the Order and the Flying Squads
182
9 De Gaulle the Network and the Liberation
208
Epilogue
235
Notes
239
Index
315
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About the author (1993)

John Hellman is a Professor in the Department of History, McGill University.

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