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Fascists and Honourable MenContingency, Choice and the Historian

Fascists and Honourable Men: Contingency, Choice and the Historian [The interwar period in France was particularly volatile in terms of intellectual engagement in politics and produced an enormous array of manifestos, programmes and plans which sought a complete transformation of the political regime, of society and even of Man himself. These ideological tendencies stretched from the Young Right, which was strongly influenced by the intellectual baggage of the Action Française, through social-Catholicism and ‘personalism’, to the ‘neo-socialists’ and the ‘Young Turks’ of the SFIO and the Radical party respectively. In this study I employed the term ‘nonconformists’, coined by Loubet del Bayle, to refer to those who belonged to the more technocratically minded tendencies, whom Olivier Dard called ‘realists’ and who had the potential and the drive to exert influence beyond their immediate circles.] http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png

Fascists and Honourable MenContingency, Choice and the Historian

Part of the Studies in Modern History Book Series
Fascists and Honourable Men — Oct 26, 2015

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References (1)

Publisher
Palgrave Macmillan UK
Copyright
© Palgrave Macmillan, a division of Macmillan Publishers Limited 2011
ISBN
978-1-349-33414-8
Pages
178 –188
DOI
10.1057/9780230316898_6
Publisher site
See Chapter on Publisher Site

Abstract

[The interwar period in France was particularly volatile in terms of intellectual engagement in politics and produced an enormous array of manifestos, programmes and plans which sought a complete transformation of the political regime, of society and even of Man himself. These ideological tendencies stretched from the Young Right, which was strongly influenced by the intellectual baggage of the Action Française, through social-Catholicism and ‘personalism’, to the ‘neo-socialists’ and the ‘Young Turks’ of the SFIO and the Radical party respectively. In this study I employed the term ‘nonconformists’, coined by Loubet del Bayle, to refer to those who belonged to the more technocratically minded tendencies, whom Olivier Dard called ‘realists’ and who had the potential and the drive to exert influence beyond their immediate circles.]

Published: Oct 26, 2015

Keywords: Political Regime; Interwar Period; Radical Party; Intellectual Engagement; Ideological Tendency

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