Vandyyke
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« on: April 06, 2008, 10:30:57 pm » |
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I am writing a paper on Henry Rousso's book, "The Vichy Syndrome". I would like to cite a passage from Charles Solomon's book, "Handbook to Happiness". It is the passage regarding, "Owning the baby" Can someone post it for me?
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« Last Edit: April 06, 2008, 10:32:30 pm by Vandyyke »
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Vandyyke
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« Reply #1 on: April 14, 2008, 09:05:30 pm » |
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Here's my paper. (I really need to spend more time on it but its due today) I learned a lot about French history!
“I have tried within the limits of my power not to become a prisoner of the syndrome I am describing.” 1 Henry Rousso
If the purpose of this book is to redeem France for its failure to deal with its past then
Mr. Rousso has painted a good picture. His theme is about a nation that for 30 years
denied and suppressed the truth about its collaboration with Adolph Hitler and
participation in the holocaust. Eventually this nation took the painful steps in confronting
itself and by putting the guilty on trial, has made steps towards a redemption. In his
approach at identifying the problem of the French government’s owning up to their
history, Henry Rousso has chosen to look at “The Memory of Vichy”. It is through their
“memory,” borrowing metaphorically from the work of Sigmund Freud, he claims to
identify a “neurosis” which reveals itself through any “…patent topicality reference to
the past…”2 He also attempts to establish ”…a hierarchy of symptoms”3 by investigating
the reactions to “…commemorations, film, and historiography,”4 and finally by
identifying an “obsession” in French efforts to decide how the collaboration should be
remembered.
After poring over this material I would like to ask the following question: in his
effort to present the history of the Post WWII French government as a patient suffering
from the effects of trauma, neurosis, repression etc… has Rousso reduced the seriousness of the issue (owning up to French collaboration with the Nazis and
participation in the Holocaust)? By using this psychological illustration Mr. Rousso
“…has given us a subtle approach…”5 to the issue of the collaboration. Yet, is this
appropriate? Does giving a metaphorical diagnosis to the issue provide those responsible
with an excuse? After considering this material I can’t help but reflect on the similarities
in the Alberto Gonzales testimony (and numerous other contemporary political
headlines) who, at a senate hearing, stated, “I don’t recall” 72 times.6 Isn’t the truth
behind the “syndrome” the fact that De Gaulle, through politics, suppressed any efforts
by the left to bring about any actions towards accountability. Isn’t the issue the lack of
agency to bring forward the truth about the Vichy government? It is the purpose of this
paper to examine Mr. Rousso’s presentation of the memory of the French. In addition
I would like to pose questions to illustrate my perception of Mr. Rousso’s reasoning.
The Neurosis
Before I begin, I should clarify. Although Mr. Rousso uses the term associated
with psychoanalysis, “neurosis” he explains it is used “simply as metaphor”7. By this I
believe he means any manifestations that reveal the controversy behind the Vichy
government are evidence of the issues still standing. Mr. Rousso believes that memories of the occupation have proven to be enduring and controversial because of the inability
of the French to reflect upon their trauma and a number of events that succeeded the war.
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« Last Edit: April 14, 2008, 09:33:11 pm by Vandyyke »
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Vandyyke
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« Reply #2 on: April 14, 2008, 09:07:23 pm » |
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By controversial he means events of “crisis situations”8 (public outcry about the collaboration) that have appeared since 1956, vanished, and reappeared to the point of
“obsession” since the early 1970’s. The cause of this, Mr. Rousso asserts is primarily due to the fact “…the tragedy that France suffered in those years was unprecedented…”9
90,000 soldiers died, 2,000,000 taken prisoner, and crushing, humiliating military
defeats. The neurosis, resulted from the “Unfinished Mourning”10 specifically, “the
French had no time to grasp, come to terms with, and mourn what had befallen them in
one catastrophe before they found themselves caught up yet in another…”11 The
catastrophes afterwards were a sequence of events that quickly followed the end of the
occupation. These events were initiated by a speech given by Charles de Gaulle that
“…founded a myth of the post Vichy period…”12 (The myth being that France had
liberated itself.) The truth was that France had been liberated by its allies. Next, the
events in Germany and the subsequent cold war served to diminish the left wing’s role in
the resistance and bring about a “…revival of ‘neo-Vichyite’ sentiiment…”13 Fear of
the communist presence in Germany/Russia enabled the right to regain its strength in
government and at the same time diminish the power of the left. The neurosis resulted
from what Freud asserted was “a mechanism in the brain unconsciously represses this
trauma from our awareness.”14 This “repressed memory” caused an inability to bring
closure to the trauma. French citizens were like a woman who has lost an infant in childbirth. A death has occurred yet the mother has not had the opportunity to bond with
the child and therefore is not able to release what she never had. Likewise the French
have suffered a national distress because the “child was never owned.”15
REPRESSION OF MEMORY
“Over the next few years the visible signs of the wartime legacy had gradually
vanished”16 Mr. Rousso seems to assert that the French were involved in a political tango
of sorts. There was at the same time a lack of accountability over Vichy and effort by de
Gaulle to rewrite the role of the collaboration itself. De Gaulle would do this by
continuously pushing the envelope to reduce the role of the resistance and define
the Petain government in the context of the “two strings argument.”17 (This argument
claims Petain had an equal role in the deliverance of France). He begins his
discussion on repressions by describing the “relatively sedate”18 outrage over the
postwar trials that began in 1954. Also he shows us that the “…purge failed to establish
a clear defenition of the crime and misdemeanors of the collaboration…”19 Next, he
continues to show evidence that De Gaulle made continuous efforts to appeal to pro- Petain sentiment and refer to the resistance in abstractions. The honoring of a
resistance fighter, Jean Moulin, was used by the general to “…upstage his former
subordinate…” and “…relegate the resistance to a secondary role…”20 De Gaulle’s policy would continue until he would leave office and die shortly thereafter. After that De
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Vandyyke
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« Reply #3 on: April 14, 2008, 09:08:45 pm » |
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Gaulle was no longer running the government and France would soon begin to face
itself. The Broken Mirror 1971-1974
In the chapter titled “The Broken Mirror” Rousso discusses the anticipation of
artists who sensed the French were ready to face their Vichy past. Mediums of film
and books were used to bring the collaboration out into the open. Here, for the first time,
men and women were openly telling their stories about the Vichy government. In the
documentary, “The Sorrow and the Pity” interviewees discuss the reasons for the
occupation, such as anti-Semitism. Other interviews include French youth who wore
German uniforms and fought on the Eastern Front. The impact of the film had a
Major impact upon the public, “It was the first deliberate effort at demystification.”21 It
provoked a division between people who had lived through the war and those who
hadn’t. Most importantly it introduced a new way to interpret history in society. The
children of collaborators began telling their stories. The Paul Touvier affair (a recognized
war criminal who had been pardoned by the French President, George Pompidou in 1971)22 brought out public outrage and a new trial. Yet, Rousso states its impact sent the French into an obsession for its desire to reveal the truth about the Vichy government.
The Obsession
“After 1974 open and explicit references to 1940 became a constant of the cultural scene.”23
The next two chapters of his book Mr. Rousso devotes to the accomplishments of
bringing the past into a “tangible ready reality”24 by the transmission of memory through
the agency of film, trials and essays. This was accomplished through what he calls the
“Jewish” and “political Obsession” over Vichy. He discusses the outrage over statements
made during an Interview in 1978 by a former officer in the Vichy government. He also
discusses the airing of a miniseries, “The Holocaust” on national television and the
indictment of another war criminal, Martin Aznani. Finally, he discusses the
changes in the French political landscape climaxing with the Klause Barbie trial.
In review of what Mr. Rousso has sequenced, the inability of the French to mourn
the trauma of the war, the government’s suppression of memory and mythologizing of
French history and finally, as the obsession with the past, the metaphor of the psychosis
reaches a conclusion. By bringing the testimonies forward and prosecuting the guilty, the
French, were “restoring the reality that had become myth.”25 They were owning up and
taking responsibility for the past.
“Rousso’s book provides a subtle answer for those who still accuse the French of
not having confronted their past.” Stanley Hoffman
Mr. Hoffman’s forward reveals a motive of Henry Rousso’s work. It is the
redemption of France. It is the “subtle answer”26 to the criticism of French participation
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Vandyyke
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« Reply #4 on: April 14, 2008, 09:10:25 pm » |
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in the holocaust. Mr. Rousso presents to us a confused and sick patient who was
‘traumatized” by circumstances of its history, brainwashed by General de Gaulle’s
speeches, yet through “counseling,’ primarily the movie, “The Sorrow and the Pity’, France is able to identify the guilty and bring them to accountability, prosecution and incarceration. It is a very convincing argument. However, it leaves me with a sense of something all to familiar. It is, “The Memory Card”
''It's possible to forget,'' Ronald Reagan 1987 27 Throughout Mr. Rousso’s book there seems to be an elephant in the room ignored. It is
the fact that the primary motive for the French to pardon, mythologize, deny, forget their
past involvement in the collaboration is simply political posturing. It is an ugly fact
of the occupation that the political culture at the time was sympathetic towards Hitler’s
ideology and political goals. Mr. Rousso has noted that when the chamber of Deputies
and Senate ratified the armistice it voted 569-80 to grant Petain near absolute powers. The policies of his administration included “…the proclamation of anti-semitic laws…”.
Mr. Rousso also notes that “manifestations of anti-Semitism in the Southern Zone (of
France) which owed nothing to the Nazi’s”28 This resulted in the “deportation of 76,000
French and foreign Jews, fewer of 3 % survived” How could this happen? Was it the
the vulnerability of traumatized nation reacting out of fear or was it simply the fact that
the French society at that time were very anti-Semitic? It is reasonable to conclude that
the repression of memory we see during the reign of De Gaulle has more to do with old
regime than it does with a psychosis. If we look at Mr. Rousso’s , “Temperature Curve
of the Syndrome” 29 we see the history of the suppression of the facts about the
collaboration. He gauges his thermometer at an “acute crisis” from the end of the war
until the end of the Oradour trial of 1954. After this point the temperature drops to a
calm, never rising above “fever” level until 1970. Why? Rousso gives us the answer,
“The epic was over, on 9 November 1970 (De Gaulle) died.”30 After this event we
see the “explosions…of literature, film and scholarship.”31 that are the “aftershocks of
the 1940’s…”32 The death of De Gaulle opens agency for a new generation to distance
themselves from the evils of their parents and redefine the French to their world.
“Mr. Rousso uses a medical Lexicon to refer to history-memory as dependent on
working consciously with unconscious memories to revise accounts of history”33
Mr. Rousso has presented a well thought out, documented, statistically supported
history of French memory of the Vichy government. Just as the History of Mentalities
historian so he has attempted to interpret what was in the minds of the people in the past.
This attempt merits my deepest respect and admiration. Yet I am not convinced that his
presentation is without some sort of bias to empathize with the French people. I am
not convinced that the trauma they experienced prior to and after the invasion prohibited
them in facing the reality of what they did. Rather I choose to interpret the symptoms
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Vandyyke
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« Reply #5 on: April 14, 2008, 09:11:45 pm » |
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as reasonably thought out strategies of the De Gaulle Regime.
Closing Thoughts
It has been 5 years now that the leaders of our nation made a decision to invade Iraq.
At the time of this decision the American public was constantly being informed of
“Weapons of Mass Destruction” and “A Mushroom Cloud.” Regardless of the fact that a
few of us were demanding more evidence, the majority of U.S. citizens supported the
invasion knowing that innocent civilians would die as a result. Five years into the
war American citizens have been given countless other reasons as to why we invaded.
A Subtle Answer to the Critics of Americas Invasion of Iraq
“We are fighting them over there so we don’t have to fight them here.” We are bringing
democracy to the Middle East.” The list goes on and on. If we were to conduct a poll
today and ask Americans the question, “Why do you think so many Americans
supported the invasion of Iraq?” I seriously doubt anyone would admit, “We needed to
assert ourselves as the major power in the world.” However, I believe it is the reason.
This said, will historians interpret our inability to face the truth of this decision because,
“…of the trauma Americans faced as a result of 911?”
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« Last Edit: April 14, 2008, 10:12:11 pm by Vandyyke »
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