• Title of article

    Interwar France and the Rural Exodus: The National Myth in Peril

  • Author/Authors

    EDOUARD LYNCH، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
  • Pages
    12
  • From page
    165
  • To page
    176
  • Abstract
    Interwar France saw itself as a rural nation. The First World War, won in the muddy earth of the trenches, elevated the image of the ʹpeasant soldierʹ to a symbolic height. But paradoxically, it was during this period that the urban population overtook the rural. Against this backdrop, references to the noxious consequences of rural migration increased in frequency and virulence. The condemnation of rural migration was part of the celebration of a French national identity rooted in the past, the earth and other key agrarian values, such as thrift, hard work and property ownership. French peasants are perceived to be the last bearers of this value set. In other European countries too, the same ideological debate was at play. In Italy and Germany, in particular, the regimes were faced with a similar dilemma, championing a racially pure, rural, identity rooted in the past, whilst embracing a modernising revolution. Their parallel attempts at aligning these two ideas are richly suggestive.
  • Journal title
    Rural History
  • Serial Year
    2012
  • Journal title
    Rural History
  • Record number

    679059