Author: | Charles Maurras |
Pub Date: | 1941 |
Editor: | H. Lardanchet |
Country: | France |
Italic Title: | La Seule France |
La Seule France (France Alone) is a book published in 1941 by the journalist and French politician Charles Maurras, director of L'Action française. Maurras supports an isolationist position between Nazi Germany and Great Britain during World War II, and was resolutely opposed to collaborationism.
On June 22, 1940, the armistice was concluded between Nazi Germany and the last government of the French Third Republic. As early as June 26, 1940, Maurras recognized the competence of Marshal Pétain and General Weygand to request the Armistice in a declaration made at Villefranche-de-Rouergue.[1] For Maurras, the armistice offered "the substantial possibility of a reorganization from within"[2] with a view to defeating Germany.
In the spring of 1941, Maurras published La Seul France. Chronicle of the days of trial, first book of reflection since the collapse of June 1940.[3] The book is dedicated to Marshal Pétain and proclaims his support for the Révolution nationale, judged as the country's only hope for recovery.
In relation to the defeat of 1940, Charles Maurras advances three explanations: the Treaty of Versailles which precipitated Germany into revanchism, the strategy of Great Britain which had constantly weakened the position of France since 1919 and the game of anti-national minorities which had precipitated France into a conflict which was not its own.[4]
As a visceral anti-Germanist, Maurras categorically rejects fraternization with Germany:[5] Maurras refuses to choose between Germany and England and therefore defends an isolationist position hostile to collaborationism.[6] Ultimately, it's about "staying 'equidistant' from other states".[7] Historian Michel Grünewald points to a manifest contradiction in this position. Indeed, Maurras would have renounced any critical approach and realism because of an almost blind confidence in Pétain.[8] The academic Frédéric Rouvillois believes that this is "an attitude that goes against the one he has always defended and practiced". This drift was already inscribed by Henri Massis, a disciple of Maurras, who wrote in La Morale de Kant in the University of France in 1917:Maurras therefore had the newspaper L'Action française inscribed "The France, The France alone..." from August 26, 1940 until the end of the war.[9] [10] « The France alone » became the watchword of Action Française throughout the conflict.Isolated by "age and a stroke", Charles Maurras was condemned in 1945 for intellectual collaboration with Germany, partly because of this logic of .
Historian Jacques Julliard detects a Maurrassian influence in the sovereignism of Michel Onfray on the pretext of the defense of "France alone" against the European Union.[11]