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Diary Of The Dark Years 19401944 Collaboration Resistance And Daily Life In Occupied Paris Reprint Jean Guhenno

  • SKU: BELL-4722140
Diary Of The Dark Years 19401944 Collaboration Resistance And Daily Life In Occupied Paris Reprint Jean Guhenno
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Diary Of The Dark Years 19401944 Collaboration Resistance And Daily Life In Occupied Paris Reprint Jean Guhenno instant download after payment.

Publisher: Oxford University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 3.09 MB
Pages: 336
Author: Jean Guéhenno, David Ball
ISBN: 9780199970865, 0199970866
Language: English
Year: 2014
Edition: Reprint

Product desciption

Diary Of The Dark Years 19401944 Collaboration Resistance And Daily Life In Occupied Paris Reprint Jean Guhenno by Jean Guéhenno, David Ball 9780199970865, 0199970866 instant download after payment.

Jean Guéhenno's Diary of the Dark Years, 1940-1945 is the most oft-quoted piece of testimony on life in occupied France. A sharply observed record of day-to-day life under Nazi rule in Parisand a bitter commentary on literary life in those years, it has also been called "a remarkable essay on courage and cowardice" (Caroline Moorehead, Wall Street Journal). Here, David Ball provides not only the first English-translation of this important historical document, but also the first ever annotated, corrected edition.
Guéhenno was a well-known political and cultural critic, left-wing but not communist, and uncompromisingly anti-fascist. Unlike most French writers during the Occupation, he refused to pen a word for a publishing industry under Nazi control. He expressed his intellectual, moral, and emotional resistance in this diary: his shame at the Vichy government's collaboration with Nazi Germany, his contempt for its falsely patriotic reactionary ideology, his outrage at its anti-Semitism and its vilification of the Republic it had abolished, his horror at its increasingly savage repression and his disgust with his fellow intellectuals who kept on blithely writing about art and culture as if the Occupation did not exist - not to mention those who praised their new masters in prose and poetry. Also a teacher of French literature, he constantly observed the young people he taught, sometimes saddened by their conformism but always passionately trying to inspire them with the values of the French cultural tradition he loved. Guéhenno's diary often includes his own reflections on the great texts he is teaching, instilling them with special meaning in the context of the Occupation. Complete with meticulous notes and a biographical index, Ball's edition of Guéhenno's epic diary offers readers a deeper understanding not only of the diarist's cultural allusions, but also of the dramatic, historic events through which he lived.

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