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France on Trial: The Case of Marshal Pétain

France on Trial: The Case of Marshal Pétain

Current price: $35.00
Publication Date: August 22nd, 2023
Publisher:
Belknap Press
ISBN:
9780674248892
Pages:
480
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Description

A Telegraph, Spectator, Prospect, and Times Best Book of the Year

"Enthralling."―Geoffrey Wheatcroft, New York Review of Books

"This is a story not just about P tain but about war and resistance, the moral compromises of leadership, and the meaning of France itself."―Margaret MacMillan

For three weeks in July 1945 all eyes were fixed on Paris, where France's former head of state was on trial. Would Philippe P tain, hero of Verdun, be condemned as the traitor of Vichy?

In the terrible month of October 1940, few things were more shocking than the sight of Marshal Philippe P tain--supremely decorated hero of the First World War, now head of the French government--shaking hands with Hitler. Pausing to look at the cameras, P tain announced that France would henceforth collaborate with Germany. "This is my policy," he intoned. "My ministers are responsible to me. It is I alone who will be judged by History."

Five years later, in July 1945, after a wave of violent reprisals following the liberation of Paris, P tain was put on trial for his conduct during the war. He stood accused of treason, charged with heading a conspiracy to destroy France's democratic government and collaborating with Nazi Germany. The defense claimed he had sacrificed his personal honor to save France and insisted he had shielded the French people from the full scope of Nazi repression. Former resisters called for the death penalty, but many identified with this conservative military hero who had promised peace with dignity.

The award-winning author of a landmark biography of Charles de Gaulle, Julian Jackson uses P tain's three-week trial as a lens through which to examine one of history's great moral dilemmas. Was the policy of collaboration "four years to erase from our history," as the prosecution claimed? Or was it, as conservative politicians insist to this day, a sacrifice that placed pragmatism above moral purity? As head of the Vichy regime, P tain became the lightning rod for collective guilt and retribution. But he has also been an icon of the nationalist right ever since. In France on Trial, Jackson blends courtroom drama, political intrigue, and brilliant narrative history to highlight the hard choices and moral compromises leaders make in times of war.