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Revolution and the Republic

Page 5

by Jeremy Jennings

early years of the Second Empire (the amount required as caution money was raised

  74 Policing Public Opinion in the French Revolution: The Culture of Calumny and the Problem of Free

  Speech (Oxford, 2009), 10.

  75 Benjamin Constant, Principles of Politics Applicable to All Governments (Indianapolis, 2003), 152.

  Constant was mistaken about the date: the edicts were passed in 1757.

  76 See Gilbert Chinard, Jefferson et les Idéologues d’après sa correspondance inédite (Baltimore,

  1925), 31–96.

  77 Alexis de Tocqueville, ‘Lettres sur la situation intérieure de la France’, Œuvres complètes (1985),

  iii/2. 112. The French press, Tocqueville contended, had more power than its American opposite

  number. This was because it was concentrated in one place––Paris––and in fewer hands.

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  Introduction: Revolution and the Republic

  in 1852).78 They were not relaxed with the advent of the Third Republic. Writing

  in 1873, the historian Edgar Quinet could comment that ‘[t]he condition of the

  writer is worse in France than in any other place in Europe: the law treats him as a

  suspect and surrounds him with mistrust and traps’.79 It was only in 1881 that

  controls over the publication of books and newspapers were completely removed.

  This new-found freedom, when combined with reduced production costs,

  improved distribution methods, and higher levels of literacy, encouraged a flour-

  ishing daily and periodical press, but this in turn brought a press that was both

  corrupt and controlled by financial interests.80 Press restrictions were reimposed

  in the 1890s (in response to violence by anarchist groups) whilst the 1881 Act

  was suspended in 1940 with the fall of France and the beginning of the Vichy

  regime. In 1944 a set of ordinances banned any papers that had appeared under

  the German occupation and sought to protect the press from what were seen as

  dangerous commercial interests. This attempt to preserve the press from monopoly

  control was achieved at the expense of heavy reliance upon state subsidy. News-

  paper sales per head of the population in France were lower than in any other

  industrialized western European country, except Italy. Moreover, at the height of

  the Algerian conflict in the late 1950s the State sought systematically to intimidate

  editors and journalists through the confiscation of their publications.

  State control and censorship of the opera and the theatre––activities suspected of

  engendering unruly behaviour and of encouraging the expression of public opin-

  ion––were finally abolished only in 1907. If, in the eighteenth century, the cause

  célèbre was the production of Beaumarchais’s La Folle Journée, ou le Mariage de

  Figaro, for her part, Sheryl Kroen has shown how the staging of Molière’s anti-

  clerical Tartuffe became a source of popular demonstration against the religious

  policies of both Church and State during the Restoration and how, as a conse-

  quence, its performance was frequently banned by the authorities (as indeed it had

  been during the reign of Louis XIV).81 To that extent, calls for aesthetic purity,

  often justified in terms of art for art’s sake, were frequently a reflection and product

  of political repression. After the Second World War radio and television broadcast-

  ing were a state monopoly. A powerful, and at times heavily interventionist,

  Ministry of Information oversaw the content of radio and television programmes,

  thereby ensuring that broadcasters could not forget that, in President Pompidou’s

  words, they were ‘the voice of France’. Only in the 1980s did the State begin to

  loosen its grip.

  Likewise the State––especially in the period between the Restoration and the

  1848 Revolution––kept a watchful eye over what was taught in universities and did

  not hesitate to remove troublesome academics when necessary. Both François

  78 Jules Simon commented of the laws operating under the Second Empire that ‘it would be easy to

  show that [they] give to the administration the means to kill whatever paper they wish with extreme

  ease’: La Liberté politique (1871), 208.

  79 Edgar Quinet, La République, conditions de la régénération de la France (1873), 120.

  80 See Christophe Charle, Le Siècle de la presse (2004).

  81 Sheryl Kroen, Politics and Theatre: The Crisis of Legitimacy in Restoration France, 1815–1830

  (Berkeley, Calif., 2000).

  Introduction: Revolution and the Republic

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  Guizot and Jules Michelet were to fall victim to this practice. More oppressive still,

  the State resorted to imprisonment of those writers taken to be its opponents. In

  1832 this fate was to befall two leaders of the Saint-Simonian movement, Prosper

  Enfantin and Michel Chevalier, and later afflicted Félicité de Lamennais, Alexis de

  Tocqueville, Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, and many others in the nineteenth century.

  Charles Maurras, the principal ideologue of the monarchist movement in the

  twentieth century, was imprisoned for his support for the Vichy regime. Many

  other writers were subject to the arbitrary exactions of the post-Second World War

  épuration. The State also upon occasion exacted the death penalty: Condorcet in

  the eighteenth century and Robert Brasillach in the twentieth century being two of

  the unfortunate victims.82

  But both the pre- and post-1789 French State has had more in its armoury than

  these formal instruments of control. It could ennoble. It could accord prestige. It could

  grant favours. After the Revolution, in other words, patronage was modified rather

  than abolished. For example, the young (and then monarchist) Victor Hugo received a

  modest annual stipend from Louis XVIII,83 whilst after 1830 Chateaubriand lived

  off a sizeable pension provided by the exiled Bourbon monarch. Sainte-Beuve,

  Alexandre Dumas, Alfred de Musset, and many others received sinecures from the

  July Monarchy. Others, more numerous but more humble in aspiration, were

  prepared to accept employments from the State that were largely honorary and

  entailed few formal time-consuming duties. As Philip Mansel has commented, ‘inside

  many French writers there was a courtier struggling to get out’.84

  Moreover, the great academic and literary institutions of the State, first created

  under the ancien régime and later reformed and enhanced under the First Empire

  and subsequent Republics, lost none of their power to seduce. Alexis de Tocqueville

  was by no means alone in devoting considerable time and energy to securing

  election to the Académie des Sciences morales et politiques and the Académie

  Française, nor in seeking to block the election of his rivals. Even in death––as has

  been the case with Voltaire, Rousseau, Condorcet, Victor Hugo, Émile Zola, André

  Malraux, and, most recently, Alexandre Dumas––the State, with all the symbolic

  authority at its disposal, can honour its writers by moving their remains to the

  hallowed site of the Panthéon. Lesser mortals can be offered one of the many

  honorific titles of distinction and recognition that the Republic, as much as any

  other of France’s regimes, has used, in the words of Olivier Ihl, as a ‘systematic

  instrument of governance’.85 From Rousseau to Georges Sorel, from Paul Nizan

  to the
writers of today’s Le Monde diplomatique, there has been no shortage of

  commentators who have accused their fellows of undue subservience to the State.

  82 Condorcet committed suicide before the day of his execution.

  83 The son of a Bonapartist general, Hugo effectively became official poet to the royal court: see

  Graham Robb, Victor Hugo (London, 1997).

  84 Philip Mansel, Paris between Empires 1814–1852 (London, 2001), 311.

  85 Olivier Ihl, ‘Emulation through Decoration: A Science of Government?’, in Sudhir Hazareesingh

  (ed.), The Jacobin Legacy in Modern France (Oxford, 2002), 158–82. For a more extensive discussion

  see Olivier Ihl, Le Mérite et la République: Essai sur la société des émules (2007).

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  Introduction: Revolution and the Republic

  If Voltaire provided the first clear definition of the philosophe, he also illustrated

  another structural dimension of French intellectual life: banished from Paris, his

  career can be read as a sustained attempt to return to the capital. With the decline of

  the court in Versailles, the scene became, and still is, Paris, producing a geographical

  concentration of intellectual life which retains the capacity to bedazzle the foreign

  visitor.86 In 1734 Marivaux felt able to comment that ‘Paris is the world; the rest of

  the earth is nothing but its suburbs.’87 Accordingly, as Dena Goodman has observed:

  ‘over the course of the eighteenth century, aspiring young men of letters would

  pour into Paris from the provinces’.88 This is a view confirmed by Madame de Staël.

  ‘[A]s those who are endowed with intellect feel the need to exert it’, she wrote, ‘so all

  who had any talent made their way immediately to the capital in the hope of

  obtaining employment.’89 Accordingly, ‘le désert français’,90 the barren and sleepy

  world beyond Paris’s ancient city walls, has had as its corollary the unrealistic hopes

  and frustrations suffered by generations of aspiring intellectuals from the provinces

  who, like Balzac’s ‘great man in embryo’, the poet Lucien Chardon of Les Illusions

  perdues, have scrambled for success and recognition in the metropolis.

  Paris was also the capital of print.91 Publishing and consuming most of the

  nation’s book output, its libraries drew in scholars and the curious whilst its theatres

  and its concert halls attracted huge crowds. Paris’s population was substantially

  more literate than elsewhere in the country. It was also more cosmopolitan, drawing

  in exiles and visitors from all over Europe and America and (later) from Africa and

  Asia.92 Rebuilt and embellished by the mid-nineteenth-century urban transforma-

  tion masterminded by the Baron Haussmann, Paris was to be not merely the capital

  of France but the city of modernity and the metropolis of the civilized world.93

  Moreover, the city of Baudelaire’s flâneur itself became the subject of literary and

  artistic exploration and myth.

  For all the loss of universal pretensions, little has changed over the last two

  hundred years or more. In Paris are still to be found all the great institutions of

  French intellectual life, its foremost educational establishments, its great museums,

  the major publishing houses, the daily and periodical press, and, not unimportantly,

  the centres of political and administrative power.94 ‘Centralisation’, Jean-Paul Sartre

  86 See Patrice Higonnet, Paris, Capital of the World (Cambridge, Mass., 2002); Colin Jones, Paris,

  Biography of a City (London: 2004); Andrew Hussey, Paris: The Hidden City (London, 2006) and

  Graham Robb, Parisians (London, 2010).

  87 Quoted in Jones, Paris, Biography, 204.

  88 Goodman, Republic of Letters, 24.

  89 Germaine de Staël, Considérations sur la Révolution française (1983), 415.

  90 This phrase is associated with Jean-François Gravier’s Paris et le désert français (1947).

  91 Mansel, Paris between Empires, 307–28, refers to Paris as the ‘City of Ink’.

  92 See Lloyd S. Kramer, Threshold of a New World: Intellectuals and the Exile Experience in Paris,

  1830–1848 (Ithaca, NY, 1988).

  93 As part of the plan to showcase Paris as a world capital, four international exhibitions were held in

  1855, 1867, 1878, and 1889. The last received over 32 million visitors.

  94 Further evidence of the dominance of Paris and the surrounding region is provided by the size of

  its population. As Graham Robb recounts, in 1801 more people lived in Paris than in the next six

  biggest cities combined. By 1886 the figure has risen to the next sixteen cities combined: see The

  Discovery of France (London, 2007), 3–18.

  Introduction: Revolution and the Republic

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  wrote, describing the situation of the writer in 1947, ‘has grouped us all in Paris.’95

  A ‘busy American’ or ‘trained cyclist’, he added, could meet all the people he needed

  to know in twenty-four hours. Nowhere has this been truer than in the field of

  education. Here, as the work of Jean-François Sirinelli has revealed, the picture has

  been, and still is, one of a small and self-contained intellectual elite.96

  If Dena Goodman makes the point that, in the eighteenth century, young men

  of letters flocked to the capital, she also comments that they ‘were in no hurry to

  leave Paris’. In later years this proved less to be the case, as we must not forget the

  numerous voyages undertaken voluntarily by French writers to such countries as

  Italy, Germany, England, Russia/the Soviet Union,97 America,98 the Orient, and,

  more recently, Maoist China and Castro’s Cuba. But Goodman’s observation

  contains more than a grain of truth. When Simone de Beauvoir visited New

  York for the first time in January 1947, for example, she was shocked to discover

  that she could love another city as much as she loved Paris.99

  The fact is, however, that quite frequently France’s turbulent political history

  gave her writers no choice but to leave the capital. An astonishing number of the

  authors cited in this book spent either a small or a significant part of their careers

  in exile. If, as the example of Voltaire illustrates,100 this was the case under the

  ancien régime, it was equally true during the period of the Revolution and the First

  Empire. Joseph de Maistre, sharing the enforced exile of many royalist sympathi-

  sers, wrote most of his diatribes against the Revolution in St Petersburg, whilst

  Madame de Staël, after years of involuntary travel across Europe, published her

  influential De l’Allemagne in London. It was also true of the Second Empire, when

  important exiles included Edgar Quinet, Jules Michelet, Jules Barni, Louis Blanc,

  and, most famously, Victor Hugo, who, like Chateaubriand before him, sought

  refuge in the Channel Islands. The experience was repeated under the Vichy

  regime, when Raymond Aron and Simone Weil followed General de Gaulle to

  London and others, such as Claude Lévi-Strauss and Georges Bernanos, found

  a safer haven in the United States101 or further afield in Latin America. The July

  Monarchy forced Étienne Cabet into exile and even the Third Republic drove

  Émile Zola abroad as he sought to avoid imprisonment after the publication of

  his open letter denouncing the miscarriage of justice involving Captain Alfred

  Dreyfus.102 As Madame de Staël commented, ‘
the fear of such an exile was

  95 Jean-Paul Sartre, What is Literature? (London, 1967), 125.

  96 Génération intellectuelle: Khâgneux et Normaliens dans l’entre-deux guerres (1988).

  97 See in particular Astolphe de Custine’s La Russie en 1839 (1843).

  98 See Durand Echeverria, Mirage in the West: A History of the French Image of America (Princeton,

  NJ, 1957).

  99 Simone de Beauvoir, L’Amérique au jour le jour (1997), 104.

  100 See Ian Davidson, Voltaire in Exile: The Last Years, 1753–78 (London, 2005).

  101 See Jeffrey Mehlman, Emigré New York: French Intellectuals in Wartime Manhattan, 1940–44

  (Baltimore, 2000) and Emmanuelle Loyer, Paris à New York: Intellectuels et artistes français en exil

  1940–1947 (2005).

  102 See Lloyd S. Kramer, ‘S’exiler’, in Duclert and Prochasson, Dictionnaire critique de la République

  (2002), 1042–50.

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  Introduction: Revolution and the Republic

  sufficient to reduce all the inhabitants of the principal city of the empire to

  slavery’.103

  Parisian dominance has taken another important form. Prior to, and immedi-

  ately after, the Revolution, the linguistic map of France was immensely complex,

  constituting a rich mosaic of languages and dialects, many such as Breton and

  Alsatian quite distinct from French.104 As Daniel Roche comments: ‘in the eigh-

  teenth century, learned people began to think of these dialects and patois in terms

  of Parisian linguistic superiority: these impure tongues spoken by peasants and

  others threatened the purity of Paris’.105 What occurred, following the policies

  introduced during the Revolution and after intended to silence these diverse

  tongues,106 was the progressive triumph of the capital, with the result that France

  became increasingly characterized by linguistic homogeneity. By the end of the

  nineteenth century, the schoolteachers of the Third Republic, the so-called ‘black

  hussars’, had ensured that few, if any, linguistic barriers stood in the way of the

  circulation of (Parisian) ideas. As a consequence, the defence of France’s indigenous

  languages, as with the cause of regionalism more generally, was until recently largely

  consigned to the advocates of Catholic and monarchical reaction.107

  Moreover, this provides a clue to the important cleavages that were to inform

 

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