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Robert Brasillach

Robert Brasillach (French pronunciation: [ʁɔbɛʁ bʁazijak] ; 31 March 1909 – 6 February 1945) was a French author and journalist. He was the editor of Je suis partout, a nationalist newspaper which advocated fascist movements and supported Jacques Doriot. After the liberation of France in 1944, he was executed following a trial and Charles de Gaulle's express refusal to grant him a pardon. Brasillach was executed for advocating collaborationism, denunciation and incitement to murder. The execution remains a subject of some controversy, because Brasillach was executed for "intellectual crimes", rather than military or political actions.[1]

Robert Brasillach
Robert Brasillach (1938)
Born31 March 1909
Perpignan, France
Died6 February 1945(1945-02-06) (aged 35)
Fort de Montrouge, Arcueil, France
Cause of deathExecution by firing squad
Occupation(s)Journalist, author
Conviction(s)Treason
Criminal penaltyDeath

Biography edit

Robert Brasillach was born in Perpignan on 31 March 1909, the son of Lieutenant Arthémile Brasillach, who served in the colonial regiment of Marshall Lyautey in Morocco, and Marguerite Brasillach, née Redo.[2] He studied at the École normale supérieure, at the time a school of the University of Paris, and then became a novelist and literary critic for the Action française of Charles Maurras. After the 6 February 1934 crisis in the Place de la Concorde, Brasillach openly supported fascism. His politics are shared by several of the protagonists in his literary works, notably the two male main characters in The Seven Colours (see below).

Author edit

Brasillach wrote both fiction and non-fiction. While his fiction dealt with love, life and politics in his era, his non-fiction dealt with a great variety of themes, ranging from drama, great literary figures and contemporary world events. His work in the realm of cinema history (see below) was particularly influential.

Cinema edit

Brasillach was fascinated by the cinema and in 1935 co-wrote a detailed critical history of that medium, Histoire du cinéma (re-edited in 1943), with his brother-in-law, Maurice Bardèche. This work remained the "most prominent aesthetic history of film for at least a decade", and a work that exerted considerable influence, via its impact on Georges Sadoul (who nonetheless disliked the authors) until the 1970s.[3] Unlike several other authors and critics of the time, Brasillach did not see cinema through an overtly political lens, although the 1943 edition of his work did contain anti-Semitic comments not present in the original.[4] Despite being fervent nationalists and personally believing that each nation and people had a unique cinema, the authors instead focused on international trends rather than local particularities.[5] Brasillach frequented Henri Langlois' Cercle du cinéma (Cinema Circle). His personal tastes are detailed in his writings of the period. These tastes ranged from Soviet cinema (Battleship Potemkin and Alexander Nevski[6]) to film-makers Charlie Chaplin, G.W. Pabst, René Clair and Jean Renoir and to some Hollywood films from directors such as John Ford, Frank Borzage and King Vidor. Brasillach was drawn to originality and explored foreign cinema, and became the first major critic in France to address Japanese cinema, the work of Yasujirō Ozu, Kenji Mizoguchi and Heinosuke Gosho.[7] While in prison, he worked on a third edition of his work on cinema and began to adapt a work on Falstaff which he hoped to film with Raimu.

Politics and wartime activities edit

He became an editor of Je suis partout, a fascist paper founded by dissidents from the Action Française and led by Pierre Gaxotte. Brasillach was attracted to the fascistic Rexist movement in Belgium, and wrote an article and later a book about the leader of the movement, Leon Degrelle. Brasillach admired what he perceived to be Degrelle's youth and charisma and Degrelle's insistence on being neither left nor right, supporting striking workers, encouraging love of God, the King and family and desiring to see the establishment of an anti-communist and anti-capitalist, Christian-influenced corporate state.[8] Degrelle collaborated with the German occupation of Belgium and served in the Waffen-SS. Brasillach was also greatly impressed by José Antonio Primo de Rivera and his Falangist movement.[9] By contrast, he described Mein Kampf as a "masterpiece of cretinism" in which Hitler appeared to be "a sort of enraged teacher."[10]

A soldier in 1940, Brasillach was captured by the Germans and held prisoner for several months after the fall of France. At his trial, the prosecution alleged that his release was due to pro-German articles written while in captivity.[11] He was freed in early 1941 and returned to his editorial role at Je suis partout. He wrote in favour of the Vichy regime but later embraced a more committed germanophile policy of collaboration and Nazi policies and began to criticize the Vichy state. He joined a group of French authors and artists in a trip to meet with German counterparts in Weimar[12] and in November 1942 he supported the German militarisation of the unoccupied zone (Case Anton) under the Vichy government because it "reunited France".

He visited the site of the Katyn massacre, toured the Eastern Front, visited Legion of French Volunteers Against Bolshevism and wrote, on his return to France, that he had gone from embracing a collaboration due to reason and rationality to being a collaborator for reasons of the heart ("De collaborationiste de raison, je suis devenu collaborationiste de coeur.")[13] He published the names and addresses of Jews who had gone into hiding,[14] called for the death of left-wing politicians, and in the summer of 1944 signed the call for the summary execution of all members of the French Resistance. He considered himself a "moderate" antisemite and was replaced as editor of Je suis partout in 1943 by the even more extreme Pierre-Antoine Cousteau.[15] He was a member of the Groupe Collaboration, an initiative that encouraged close cultural ties between France and Germany.[16] He worked for various journals, including Révolution nationale and le Petit Parisien.[12] After the liberation of Paris, Brasillach hid in an attic, joking in his diary: "Jews have been living in cupboards for four years, why not imitate them?".[17] He surrendered on 14 September when he heard that his mother had been arrested. He spent the next five months in prison and continued his literary endeavours while incarcerated.

Trial and execution edit

Brasillach was tried in Paris on 19 January 1945. The trial judge had served under Vichy.[18] The prosecutor reiterated Brasillach's vehement antisemitism, linked his praise of Germany and denunciation of the Resistance to SS massacres in France and played upon homophobic sentiments by repeatedly drawing the jurors' attention to the author's homosexuality (alleged, but denied by those who knew him best), noting, inter alia, that he had slept with the enemy and approved of Germany's "penetration" of France.[19][14] In so doing, the prosecution was making hay with Brasillach's own words, as he had suggested, as Liberation approached, that France had slept with Germany and would remember the experience fondly. Brasillach was sentenced to death. Brasillach responded to the outrage of some of his supporters then in attendance by saying "It's an honour!"[18]

The death sentence caused an uproar in French literary circles and even some of Brasillach's political opponents protested. Resistance member and author François Mauriac, whom Brasillach had savaged in the press, circulated a petition to Charles de Gaulle to commute the sentence. This petition was signed by many of the leading lights of the French literary world, including Paul Valéry, Paul Claudel, Albert Camus, Jean Cocteau, Colette, Arthur Honegger, Jean Anouilh and Thierry Maulnier.[20] De Gaulle did not comply and Brasillach was executed by firing squad in Montrouge. It has been argued that De Gaulle refused to spare Brasillach because the author had on numerous occasions called for Georges Mandel's execution. De Gaulle admired Mandel, a prominent conservative politician (who happened to be Jewish), and who was murdered by the Milice during the closing days of the Occupation.[21] Brasillach called out "But all the same, long live France!" ("Vive la France quand même!") immediately before his execution.[22] He was buried in the cimetière de Charonne in the 20th Arrondissement of Paris. His brother-in-law, Maurice Bardèche, was later buried next to him.

Legacy edit

Brasillach sought to protect his own legacy as his life drew to a close. He composed several works while awaiting trial and execution, including a collection of verse and a letter to French youth of the future, explaining and justifying his actions (Lettre à un soldat de la classe de soixante (Lettre), see below). In Lettre he was unrepentant about his fascism, his anti-Semitism or his wartime activity, although he insisted that he had no idea that deported French Jews were being murdered.

Brasillach's trial and execution inspired Simone de Beauvoir's essay "An Eye for an Eye", in which she defended the role of emotion (especially hatred) in politics and the role of revenge in punishment.[14]

His biographer Alice Kaplan noted that his death made him the "James Dean of French fascism" and a martyr to the extreme right. François Truffaut was both aware and appreciative of Brasillach, stating that Brasillach and Pierre Drieu La Rochelle shared similar political beliefs and that "views that earn their advocates the death penalty are bound to be worthy of esteem."[23]

Dominique Venner's Nouvelle Revue d'Histoire has praised the author's intellectual oeuvre.[6]

A group called Association des Amis de Robert Brasillach[24] celebrates the author's work and legacy.

Cultural references edit

Works edit

Below is a list of Brasillach's oeuvre (fiction, non-fiction and poetry), including posthumous works. Certain works have been briefly summarised.

Novels edit

  • 1932 Le Voleur d'étincelles (The Spark Thief/The Stealer of Sparks)
  • 1934 L'Enfant de la nuit (Child of the Night)
  • 1936 Le Marchand d'oiseaux (The Bird Merchant)
  • 1937 Comme le temps passe (How The Time Passes By), nominated for Prix Femina 1937
  • 1939 Les Sept Couleurs (The Seven Colors), nominated for Prix Goncourt 1939.
The book begins with the courtship of Patrice and Catherine, two students, in Paris in the 1920s. At one point the young couple meet two children, who are also called Patrice and Catherine and who claim to be a couple. His studies completed, Patrice leaves to work in Italy, where he becomes enamoured with Italian fascism. Catherine, desiring a more stable relationship, eventually marries a Communist she has met at the office where she works, François. Patrice leaves Italy and serves a five-year stint in the Foreign Legion, where he befriends a young Nazi. After his time in the Legion, Patrice goes to work in Nazi Germany, where he finds Nazi ritual (e.g. Nuremberg rallies, the banners and marches) very engaging. Patrice learns from a friend from his Paris days that François has become a fascist, having turned from both Communism and the Third Republic following the 6 February 1934 crisis in which the extreme right rioted against government "corruption" and perhaps planned to overthrow the state. Ten years after he last saw Catherine, Patrice returns to Paris to visit Catherine and she agrees to go away with him but asks for a few days to collect her thoughts. She decides to stay with François instead, but François misunderstands and believes she has left him. François leaves France without a word and joins the Nationalist cause in the Spanish Civil War, where he has a brief encounter with the Nazi Patrice met in the Foreign Legion. Catherine stays faithful to François, although she meets a young Frenchman who fought for the Republicans in Spain and who turns out to be the young Patrice she had met while he was a child in the 1920s. Meanwhile, the elder Patrice marries a young German woman. The book ends with Catherine on her way to visit François in hospital in Spain after learning that he has been seriously wounded at the front.
The title of the book stems from the seven styles in which it is written: a narrative of Patrice and Catherine's time together in the 1920s; letters exchanged between Patrice and Catherine while Patrice is in Italy; Patrice's journal entries while he is in Germany; a series of reflections or maxims, mainly on the process of aging and turning 30; dialogue, in the form of a play, between François and Catherine and Catherine and Patrice in the mid-1930s; a series of "documents" François has put together in a scrap book about the Spanish Civil War; and finally a "speech" ("discours"), in which Catherine describes her thoughts as she travels to meet François in hospital.
The book is very sympathetic to fascism as a regenerating ideology. However, given his future as a collaborator, readers may be surprised that Communism and socialism are not attacked outright and that the "Patrice" character mentions several times that Nazism may not be as enduring as fascism and that Frenchmen may have to fight the Germans in the future. Also, it is of note that Catherine, who calls herself a "petite bourgeoise" and who exemplifies French rationalism (and perhaps represents France herself) as noted in the dialogue section, chooses François, the French/native fascist and turns away from Patrice, who has immersed himself in Italian and German ideology.
  • 1943 La Conquérante (The Conqueror; gender suggests a female conqueror)
  • 1944 Poèmes (Poems)
  • 1944 Poèmes

Non-fiction edit

  • 1931 Présence de Virgile (The Presence of Virgil)
  • 1932 Le Procès de Jeanne d'Arc (edited and introduced by Robert Brasillach) (The Trial of Joan of Arc)
  • 1935 Portraits. Barrès, Proust, Maurras, Colette, Giraudoux, Morand, Cocteau, Malraux, etc., (Portraits)
  • 1935 (re-edited in 1943) Histoire du Cinéma, two volumes (with Maurice Bardèche)
  • 1936, Animateurs de théâtre (Theater Directors/Organizers)
  • 1936 Léon Degrelle et l'avenir de « Rex » (Léon Degrelle and the Future of the Rexist Party)
  • 1936 Les Cadets de l'Alcazar (with Henri Massis, see French Wikipedia) (The Cadets of the Alcazar); later renamed the Defenders of the Alcazar
This short work chronicles the siege of the Alcazar in Toledo by Republican forces in 1936 during the Spanish Civil War. While it lionises the defenders, Brasillach does not shy from mentioning the execution of the Republican prisoners in Toledo's hospitals after the relief of the city and the Alcazar. The author also discounts certain elements of Nationalist propaganda concerning La Pasionaria, Communist Dolores Ibárruri. The work remains heavily pro-Nationalist, with Falangist and Carlist songs reprinted in its pages.
  • 1938 Pierre Corneille, a biography of the famous dramatist
  • 1939 Histoire de la guerre d’Espagne (with Maurice Bardèche) (History of the Spanish Civil War)
  • 1941 Notre avant-guerre (Our pre-war)
  • 1944 Les Quatre Jeudis (The Four Thursdays) A series of articles about literature, literary figures, trends, politics and society largely published in the press earlier in Brasillach's career (drawn from articles often originally printed on Thursdays).

Posthumously published works edit

  • 1945 Poèmes de Fresnes
  • 1946 Lettre à un soldat de la classe 60 (Letter to a Soldier of the Class of 1960).
In this 'letter', written while Brasillach was awaiting trial, the author expressed his thoughts and hopes to a future generation. He argued that he had few regrets about his social and political role in World War II era France. He admitted that certain excesses had occurred under the occupation but contrasted the Germans' worst crimes against Frenchmen (e.g. the Oradour-sur-Glane massacre) to the well documented atrocities committed by the French in their colonial empire, especially Indochina. He re-iterated his commitment to anti-semitism, although he insisted that he did not know of and entirely repudiated the holocaust despite having advocated the deportations of French Jewry. In the letter Brasillach insists that Franco-German relations would inevitably continue to improve and that the occupation had ultimately brought the two nations closer together. While these statements would have shocked many at the time, when one considers the rapid rapprochement between the two nations post-war, the general idea of Franco-German unity he expressed in some way presages the development of Franco-German cooperation and the pivotal role of the two nations in the European Community/Union, although the causes of this rapprochement may not have been what he foresaw. Brasillach also re-iterated his commitment to fascism and argued that, whether it survived as an ideology or not, the generation of the class of 1960 would doubtless look back on and consider German fascism with a sense of awe. Brasillach also argued that he believed that the spirit of fascism should be mixed with the English sense of liberty and free expression, despite the apparent contradiction in terms.
  • 1947 Chénier, La Pensée française (Chénier: French Thought)
  • 1950 Anthologie de la poésie grecque (Anthology of Greek Poetry) ISBN 2-253-01517-2
  • 1952 Lettres écrites en prison (Letters Written in Prison)
  • 1953 Six heures à perdre (Six Hours to Kill)
  • 1954 Bérénice (Berenice) (play, first run - 1957)
  • 1955 Journal d'un homme occupé (Journal of a (Pre)Occupied Man)
  • 1961 Poètes oubliés (Forgotten Poets)
  • 1961 Dom Rémy
  • 1962 Commentaire sur La Varende (Commentary on La Varende)
  • 1963 En marge de Daphnis et Chloé (On the Edge of Daphnis and Chloé)
  • 1963 Nouvelle prière sur l'Acropole (New Prayer on the Acropolis)
  • 1967 Écrit à Fresnes (Written at Fresnes)
  • 1968 Une génération dans l'orage (A Generation in the Storm)
  • 1970 Vingt lettres de Robert Brasillach (Twenty Letters)
  • 1971 Abel Bonnard biography
  • 1974 Les Captifs incomplete novel
  • 1984 Le Paris de Balzac (Balzac's Paris)
  • 1985 Hugo et le snobisme révolutionnaire (Hugo and Revolutionary Snobbism)
  • 1985 Montherlant entre les hommes et les femmes (Montherlant between Men and Women)
  • 1992 Fulgur novel, compilation
  • 1999 La Question juive, articles de Brasillach et Cousteau (The Jewish Question: Articles by Brasillach and Cousteau)
  • 2002 Relectures Robert Brasillach (Re-reading Robert Brasillach)

References edit

  1. ^ Lawrence, Osborne (29 March 2000). "Poison pen". Salon. from the original on 23 June 2016. Retrieved 7 September 2019.
  2. ^ Kaplan 2000, p. 1.
  3. ^ David Bordwell, On the history of film style, Harvard University Press, 1997, at p. 40 and 42
  4. ^ 1943 additions: On the history of film style, p.40
  5. ^ On the history of film style, p.39
  6. ^ a b Philippe d'Hughes, "L'étincelante génération Brasillach" 41 (March–April 2009) NRH, 25-27
  7. ^ see Maurice Bardeche and Robert Brasillach, Histoire du cinéma «Le cinéma japonais» Tome II, p:381-412, Les sept couleurs, Paris, 1964
  8. ^ "Lettre a une provinciale: visite a Leon Degrelle" Je Suis Partout, 20 juin 1936
  9. ^ Philippe D'Hugues, "Brasillach et l'Allemagne", in La Nouvelle Revue d'Histoire, Numero 50, 2010 at p. 45
  10. ^ Philippe D'Hugues, "Brasillach et l'Allemagne", in La Nouvelle Revue d'Histoire, Numéro 50, 2010 at p. 46
  11. ^ Quatre procès de trahison devant la cour de justice de Paris: Paquis, Buchard, Luchaire, Brasillach (réquisitoires et plaidoiries) (Les éditions de Paris, 1947)
  12. ^ a b Philippe D'Hugues, "Brasillach et l'Allemagne", in La Nouvelle Revue d'Histoire, Numero 50, 2010 at p. 47
  13. ^ Philippe D'Hugues, "Brasillach et l'Allemagne", in La Nouvelle Revue d'Histoire, Numero 50, 2010 at p. 47-48
  14. ^ a b c Smith, Blake (19 August 2019). "In Praise of Hate". Tablet Magazine. Retrieved 20 August 2019.
  15. ^ for a history of Je suis partout see: Pierre-Marie Dioudonnat Je suis partout (1930-1944). Les maurrassiens devant la tentation fasciste (éd. La Table ronde, 1973, rééd. 1987); Les 700 rédacteurs de « Je suis partout », éd. SEDOPOLS, 1993
  16. ^ Karen Fiss, Grand Illusion: The Third Reich, the Paris Exposition, and the Cultural Seduction of France, University of Chicago Press, 2009, p. 204
  17. ^ Kaplan 2000, p. 71.
  18. ^ a b Kaplan 2000, p. 187.
  19. ^ "Quatre procès de trahison".
  20. ^ Jean Lacouture, La raison de l'autre, Montesquieu, Mauriac, Confluences, 2002.
  21. ^ Jean-Luc Barré, « Brasillach, Robert (1909-1945) », Dictionnaire de Gaulle, Paris, Éditions Robert Laffont, coll. Bouquins, 2006, p. 147.
  22. ^ Kaplan 2000, p. 210.
  23. ^ Antoine de Baecque and Serge Toubiana, Truffaut: A Biography (University of California Press, 1999)at p. 85
  24. ^ Archived from the original on 3 April 2009.
Bibliography

Further reading edit

  • Fascist Ego: A Political Biography of Robert Brasillach by William R. Tucker ISBN 0-520-02710-8
  • The Ideological Hero in the Novels of Robert Brasillach, Roger Vailland & Andre Malraux by Peter D. Tame ISBN 0-8204-3126-5
  • Translation of Notre Avant-Guerre/Before the War by Robert Brasillach, Peter Tame ISBN 0-7734-7158-8
  • Wesseling, H. L. (2002). "Chapter 6: Robert Brasillach and the Temptation of Fascism". Certain ideas of France: essays on French history and civilization. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-313-32341-6.

External links edit

  • by Richard Corliss
  • by Kim Koster
  • Robert Fulford's column about Marguerite Duras & Robert Brasillach from The National Post

robert, brasillach, french, pronunciation, ʁɔbɛʁ, bʁazijak, march, 1909, february, 1945, french, author, journalist, editor, suis, partout, nationalist, newspaper, which, advocated, fascist, movements, supported, jacques, doriot, after, liberation, france, 194. Robert Brasillach French pronunciation ʁɔbɛʁ bʁazijak 31 March 1909 6 February 1945 was a French author and journalist He was the editor of Je suis partout a nationalist newspaper which advocated fascist movements and supported Jacques Doriot After the liberation of France in 1944 he was executed following a trial and Charles de Gaulle s express refusal to grant him a pardon Brasillach was executed for advocating collaborationism denunciation and incitement to murder The execution remains a subject of some controversy because Brasillach was executed for intellectual crimes rather than military or political actions 1 Robert BrasillachRobert Brasillach 1938 Born31 March 1909Perpignan FranceDied6 February 1945 1945 02 06 aged 35 Fort de Montrouge Arcueil FranceCause of deathExecution by firing squadOccupation s Journalist authorConviction s TreasonCriminal penaltyDeath Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Author 1 1 1 Cinema 1 2 Politics and wartime activities 1 3 Trial and execution 1 4 Legacy 1 4 1 Cultural references 2 Works 2 1 Novels 2 2 Non fiction 2 3 Posthumously published works 3 References 4 Further reading 5 External linksBiography editRobert Brasillach was born in Perpignan on 31 March 1909 the son of Lieutenant Arthemile Brasillach who served in the colonial regiment of Marshall Lyautey in Morocco and Marguerite Brasillach nee Redo 2 He studied at the Ecole normale superieure at the time a school of the University of Paris and then became a novelist and literary critic for the Action francaise of Charles Maurras After the 6 February 1934 crisis in the Place de la Concorde Brasillach openly supported fascism His politics are shared by several of the protagonists in his literary works notably the two male main characters in The Seven Colours see below Author edit Brasillach wrote both fiction and non fiction While his fiction dealt with love life and politics in his era his non fiction dealt with a great variety of themes ranging from drama great literary figures and contemporary world events His work in the realm of cinema history see below was particularly influential Cinema edit Brasillach was fascinated by the cinema and in 1935 co wrote a detailed critical history of that medium Histoire du cinema re edited in 1943 with his brother in law Maurice Bardeche This work remained the most prominent aesthetic history of film for at least a decade and a work that exerted considerable influence via its impact on Georges Sadoul who nonetheless disliked the authors until the 1970s 3 Unlike several other authors and critics of the time Brasillach did not see cinema through an overtly political lens although the 1943 edition of his work did contain anti Semitic comments not present in the original 4 Despite being fervent nationalists and personally believing that each nation and people had a unique cinema the authors instead focused on international trends rather than local particularities 5 Brasillach frequented Henri Langlois Cercle du cinema Cinema Circle His personal tastes are detailed in his writings of the period These tastes ranged from Soviet cinema Battleship Potemkin and Alexander Nevski 6 to film makers Charlie Chaplin G W Pabst Rene Clair and Jean Renoir and to some Hollywood films from directors such as John Ford Frank Borzage and King Vidor Brasillach was drawn to originality and explored foreign cinema and became the first major critic in France to address Japanese cinema the work of Yasujirō Ozu Kenji Mizoguchi and Heinosuke Gosho 7 While in prison he worked on a third edition of his work on cinema and began to adapt a work on Falstaff which he hoped to film with Raimu Politics and wartime activities edit He became an editor of Je suis partout a fascist paper founded by dissidents from the Action Francaise and led by Pierre Gaxotte Brasillach was attracted to the fascistic Rexist movement in Belgium and wrote an article and later a book about the leader of the movement Leon Degrelle Brasillach admired what he perceived to be Degrelle s youth and charisma and Degrelle s insistence on being neither left nor right supporting striking workers encouraging love of God the King and family and desiring to see the establishment of an anti communist and anti capitalist Christian influenced corporate state 8 Degrelle collaborated with the German occupation of Belgium and served in the Waffen SS Brasillach was also greatly impressed by Jose Antonio Primo de Rivera and his Falangist movement 9 By contrast he described Mein Kampf as a masterpiece of cretinism in which Hitler appeared to be a sort of enraged teacher 10 A soldier in 1940 Brasillach was captured by the Germans and held prisoner for several months after the fall of France At his trial the prosecution alleged that his release was due to pro German articles written while in captivity 11 He was freed in early 1941 and returned to his editorial role at Je suis partout He wrote in favour of the Vichy regime but later embraced a more committed germanophile policy of collaboration and Nazi policies and began to criticize the Vichy state He joined a group of French authors and artists in a trip to meet with German counterparts in Weimar 12 and in November 1942 he supported the German militarisation of the unoccupied zone Case Anton under the Vichy government because it reunited France He visited the site of the Katyn massacre toured the Eastern Front visited Legion of French Volunteers Against Bolshevism and wrote on his return to France that he had gone from embracing a collaboration due to reason and rationality to being a collaborator for reasons of the heart De collaborationiste de raison je suis devenu collaborationiste de coeur 13 He published the names and addresses of Jews who had gone into hiding 14 called for the death of left wing politicians and in the summer of 1944 signed the call for the summary execution of all members of the French Resistance He considered himself a moderate antisemite and was replaced as editor of Je suis partout in 1943 by the even more extreme Pierre Antoine Cousteau 15 He was a member of the Groupe Collaboration an initiative that encouraged close cultural ties between France and Germany 16 He worked for various journals including Revolution nationale and le Petit Parisien 12 After the liberation of Paris Brasillach hid in an attic joking in his diary Jews have been living in cupboards for four years why not imitate them 17 He surrendered on 14 September when he heard that his mother had been arrested He spent the next five months in prison and continued his literary endeavours while incarcerated Trial and execution edit Brasillach was tried in Paris on 19 January 1945 The trial judge had served under Vichy 18 The prosecutor reiterated Brasillach s vehement antisemitism linked his praise of Germany and denunciation of the Resistance to SS massacres in France and played upon homophobic sentiments by repeatedly drawing the jurors attention to the author s homosexuality alleged but denied by those who knew him best noting inter alia that he had slept with the enemy and approved of Germany s penetration of France 19 14 In so doing the prosecution was making hay with Brasillach s own words as he had suggested as Liberation approached that France had slept with Germany and would remember the experience fondly Brasillach was sentenced to death Brasillach responded to the outrage of some of his supporters then in attendance by saying It s an honour 18 The death sentence caused an uproar in French literary circles and even some of Brasillach s political opponents protested Resistance member and author Francois Mauriac whom Brasillach had savaged in the press circulated a petition to Charles de Gaulle to commute the sentence This petition was signed by many of the leading lights of the French literary world including Paul Valery Paul Claudel Albert Camus Jean Cocteau Colette Arthur Honegger Jean Anouilh and Thierry Maulnier 20 De Gaulle did not comply and Brasillach was executed by firing squad in Montrouge It has been argued that De Gaulle refused to spare Brasillach because the author had on numerous occasions called for Georges Mandel s execution De Gaulle admired Mandel a prominent conservative politician who happened to be Jewish and who was murdered by the Milice during the closing days of the Occupation 21 Brasillach called out But all the same long live France Vive la France quand meme immediately before his execution 22 He was buried in the cimetiere de Charonne in the 20th Arrondissement of Paris His brother in law Maurice Bardeche was later buried next to him Legacy edit Brasillach sought to protect his own legacy as his life drew to a close He composed several works while awaiting trial and execution including a collection of verse and a letter to French youth of the future explaining and justifying his actions Lettre a un soldat de la classe de soixante Lettre see below In Lettre he was unrepentant about his fascism his anti Semitism or his wartime activity although he insisted that he had no idea that deported French Jews were being murdered Brasillach s trial and execution inspired Simone de Beauvoir s essay An Eye for an Eye in which she defended the role of emotion especially hatred in politics and the role of revenge in punishment 14 His biographer Alice Kaplan noted that his death made him the James Dean of French fascism and a martyr to the extreme right Francois Truffaut was both aware and appreciative of Brasillach stating that Brasillach and Pierre Drieu La Rochelle shared similar political beliefs and that views that earn their advocates the death penalty are bound to be worthy of esteem 23 Dominique Venner s Nouvelle Revue d Histoire has praised the author s intellectual oeuvre 6 A group called Association des Amis de Robert Brasillach 24 celebrates the author s work and legacy Cultural references edit The Jean Luc Godard film Eloge de l amour features the recitation of Brasillach s Testament written before his execution Brasillach is described in Jonathan Littell s novel Les Bienveillantes where he is one of the fellow students of the main character Maximilian Aue French black metal band Peste Noire dedicated to Brasillach Psaume IV from the album Folkfuck Folie Works editBelow is a list of Brasillach s oeuvre fiction non fiction and poetry including posthumous works Certain works have been briefly summarised Novels edit 1932 Le Voleur d etincelles The Spark Thief The Stealer of Sparks 1934 L Enfant de la nuit Child of the Night 1936 Le Marchand d oiseaux The Bird Merchant 1937 Comme le temps passe How The Time Passes By nominated for Prix Femina 1937 1939 Les Sept Couleurs The Seven Colors nominated for Prix Goncourt 1939 The book begins with the courtship of Patrice and Catherine two students in Paris in the 1920s At one point the young couple meet two children who are also called Patrice and Catherine and who claim to be a couple His studies completed Patrice leaves to work in Italy where he becomes enamoured with Italian fascism Catherine desiring a more stable relationship eventually marries a Communist she has met at the office where she works Francois Patrice leaves Italy and serves a five year stint in the Foreign Legion where he befriends a young Nazi After his time in the Legion Patrice goes to work in Nazi Germany where he finds Nazi ritual e g Nuremberg rallies the banners and marches very engaging Patrice learns from a friend from his Paris days that Francois has become a fascist having turned from both Communism and the Third Republic following the 6 February 1934 crisis in which the extreme right rioted against government corruption and perhaps planned to overthrow the state Ten years after he last saw Catherine Patrice returns to Paris to visit Catherine and she agrees to go away with him but asks for a few days to collect her thoughts She decides to stay with Francois instead but Francois misunderstands and believes she has left him Francois leaves France without a word and joins the Nationalist cause in the Spanish Civil War where he has a brief encounter with the Nazi Patrice met in the Foreign Legion Catherine stays faithful to Francois although she meets a young Frenchman who fought for the Republicans in Spain and who turns out to be the young Patrice she had met while he was a child in the 1920s Meanwhile the elder Patrice marries a young German woman The book ends with Catherine on her way to visit Francois in hospital in Spain after learning that he has been seriously wounded at the front The title of the book stems from the seven styles in which it is written a narrative of Patrice and Catherine s time together in the 1920s letters exchanged between Patrice and Catherine while Patrice is in Italy Patrice s journal entries while he is in Germany a series of reflections or maxims mainly on the process of aging and turning 30 dialogue in the form of a play between Francois and Catherine and Catherine and Patrice in the mid 1930s a series of documents Francois has put together in a scrap book about the Spanish Civil War and finally a speech discours in which Catherine describes her thoughts as she travels to meet Francois in hospital The book is very sympathetic to fascism as a regenerating ideology However given his future as a collaborator readers may be surprised that Communism and socialism are not attacked outright and that the Patrice character mentions several times that Nazism may not be as enduring as fascism and that Frenchmen may have to fight the Germans in the future Also it is of note that Catherine who calls herself a petite bourgeoise and who exemplifies French rationalism and perhaps represents France herself as noted in the dialogue section chooses Francois the French native fascist and turns away from Patrice who has immersed himself in Italian and German ideology 1943 La Conquerante The Conqueror gender suggests a female conqueror 1944 Poemes Poems 1944 Poemes Non fiction edit 1931 Presence de Virgile The Presence of Virgil 1932 Le Proces de Jeanne d Arc edited and introduced by Robert Brasillach The Trial of Joan of Arc 1935 Portraits Barres Proust Maurras Colette Giraudoux Morand Cocteau Malraux etc Portraits 1935 re edited in 1943 Histoire du Cinema two volumes with Maurice Bardeche 1936 Animateurs de theatre Theater Directors Organizers 1936 Leon Degrelle et l avenir de Rex Leon Degrelle and the Future of the Rexist Party 1936 Les Cadets de l Alcazar with Henri Massis see French Wikipedia The Cadets of the Alcazar later renamed the Defenders of the Alcazar This short work chronicles the siege of the Alcazar in Toledo by Republican forces in 1936 during the Spanish Civil War While it lionises the defenders Brasillach does not shy from mentioning the execution of the Republican prisoners in Toledo s hospitals after the relief of the city and the Alcazar The author also discounts certain elements of Nationalist propaganda concerning La Pasionaria Communist Dolores Ibarruri The work remains heavily pro Nationalist with Falangist and Carlist songs reprinted in its pages 1938 Pierre Corneille a biography of the famous dramatist 1939 Histoire de la guerre d Espagne with Maurice Bardeche History of the Spanish Civil War 1941 Notre avant guerre Our pre war 1944 Les Quatre Jeudis The Four Thursdays A series of articles about literature literary figures trends politics and society largely published in the press earlier in Brasillach s career drawn from articles often originally printed on Thursdays Posthumously published works edit 1945 Poemes de Fresnes 1946 Lettre a un soldat de la classe 60 Letter to a Soldier of the Class of 1960 In this letter written while Brasillach was awaiting trial the author expressed his thoughts and hopes to a future generation He argued that he had few regrets about his social and political role in World War II era France He admitted that certain excesses had occurred under the occupation but contrasted the Germans worst crimes against Frenchmen e g the Oradour sur Glane massacre to the well documented atrocities committed by the French in their colonial empire especially Indochina He re iterated his commitment to anti semitism although he insisted that he did not know of and entirely repudiated the holocaust despite having advocated the deportations of French Jewry In the letter Brasillach insists that Franco German relations would inevitably continue to improve and that the occupation had ultimately brought the two nations closer together While these statements would have shocked many at the time when one considers the rapid rapprochement between the two nations post war the general idea of Franco German unity he expressed in some way presages the development of Franco German cooperation and the pivotal role of the two nations in the European Community Union although the causes of this rapprochement may not have been what he foresaw Brasillach also re iterated his commitment to fascism and argued that whether it survived as an ideology or not the generation of the class of 1960 would doubtless look back on and consider German fascism with a sense of awe Brasillach also argued that he believed that the spirit of fascism should be mixed with the English sense of liberty and free expression despite the apparent contradiction in terms 1947 Chenier La Pensee francaise Chenier French Thought 1950 Anthologie de la poesie grecque Anthology of Greek Poetry ISBN 2 253 01517 2 1952 Lettres ecrites en prison Letters Written in Prison 1953 Six heures a perdre Six Hours to Kill 1954 Berenice Berenice play first run 1957 1955 Journal d un homme occupe Journal of a Pre Occupied Man 1961 Poetes oublies Forgotten Poets 1961 Dom Remy 1962 Commentaire sur La Varende Commentary on La Varende 1963 En marge de Daphnis et Chloe On the Edge of Daphnis and Chloe 1963 Nouvelle priere sur l Acropole New Prayer on the Acropolis 1967 Ecrit a Fresnes Written at Fresnes 1968 Une generation dans l orage A Generation in the Storm 1970 Vingt lettres de Robert Brasillach Twenty Letters 1971 Abel Bonnard biography 1974 Les Captifs incomplete novel 1984 Le Paris de Balzac Balzac s Paris 1985 Hugo et le snobisme revolutionnaire Hugo and Revolutionary Snobbism 1985 Montherlant entre les hommes et les femmes Montherlant between Men and Women 1992 Fulgur novel compilation 1999 La Question juive articles de Brasillach et Cousteau The Jewish Question Articles by Brasillach and Cousteau 2002 Relectures Robert Brasillach Re reading Robert Brasillach References edit Lawrence Osborne 29 March 2000 Poison pen Salon Archived from the original on 23 June 2016 Retrieved 7 September 2019 Kaplan 2000 p 1 David Bordwell On the history of film style Harvard University Press 1997 at p 40 and 42 1943 additions On the history of film style p 40 On the history of film style p 39 a b Philippe d Hughes L etincelante generation Brasillach 41 March April 2009 NRH 25 27 see Maurice Bardeche and Robert Brasillach Histoire du cinema Le cinema japonais Tome II p 381 412 Les sept couleurs Paris 1964 Lettre a une provinciale visite a Leon Degrelle Je Suis Partout 20 juin 1936 Philippe D Hugues Brasillach et l Allemagne in La Nouvelle Revue d Histoire Numero 50 2010 at p 45 Philippe D Hugues Brasillach et l Allemagne in La Nouvelle Revue d Histoire Numero 50 2010 at p 46 Quatre proces de trahison devant la cour de justice de Paris Paquis Buchard Luchaire Brasillach requisitoires et plaidoiries Les editions de Paris 1947 a b Philippe D Hugues Brasillach et l Allemagne in La Nouvelle Revue d Histoire Numero 50 2010 at p 47 Philippe D Hugues Brasillach et l Allemagne in La Nouvelle Revue d Histoire Numero 50 2010 at p 47 48 a b c Smith Blake 19 August 2019 In Praise of Hate Tablet Magazine Retrieved 20 August 2019 for a history of Je suis partout see Pierre Marie Dioudonnat Je suis partout 1930 1944 Les maurrassiens devant la tentation fasciste ed La Table ronde 1973 reed 1987 Les 700 redacteurs de Je suis partout ed SEDOPOLS 1993 Karen Fiss Grand Illusion The Third Reich the Paris Exposition and the Cultural Seduction of France University of Chicago Press 2009 p 204 Kaplan 2000 p 71 a b Kaplan 2000 p 187 Quatre proces de trahison Jean Lacouture La raison de l autre Montesquieu Mauriac Confluences 2002 Jean Luc Barre Brasillach Robert 1909 1945 Dictionnaire de Gaulle Paris Editions Robert Laffont coll Bouquins 2006 p 147 Kaplan 2000 p 210 Antoine de Baecque and Serge Toubiana Truffaut A Biography University of California Press 1999 at p 85 Bienvenue sur le site des ARB Archived from the original on 3 April 2009 Bibliography Kaplan Alice 2000 The Collaborator The Trial and Execution of Robert Brasillach University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 42414 9 Further reading editFascist Ego A Political Biography of Robert Brasillach by William R Tucker ISBN 0 520 02710 8 The Ideological Hero in the Novels of Robert Brasillach Roger Vailland amp Andre Malraux by Peter D Tame ISBN 0 8204 3126 5 Translation of Notre Avant Guerre Before the War by Robert Brasillach Peter Tame ISBN 0 7734 7158 8 Wesseling H L 2002 Chapter 6 Robert Brasillach and the Temptation of Fascism Certain ideas of France essays on French history and civilization Westport Connecticut Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 32341 6 External links editPhotograph Killed for His Words by Richard Corliss NOXIOUS WORDS HEINOUS ACTS THE POWER OF SPEECH by Kim Koster Robert Fulford s column about Marguerite Duras amp Robert Brasillach from The National Post Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Robert Brasillach amp oldid 1210077758, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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