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Title: Republicanism at Home and Abroad


1
Republicanism at Home and Abroad
  • Dr Chris Pearson

2
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3
Antoine-Jean Gros, Figure allégorique de la
République (1794)
4
Delacroix, Liberty leading the people (1830)
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The rise of the Republic
  • 1st Republic (1792-1804), 2nd Rep (1848-51)
  • 3rd Rep est. 1870 but dominated by conservatives
    and monarchists for much of 1870s (but 1875
    universal male suffrage granted)
  • 1879- Jules Ferry becomes PM, Gambetta head of
    Chamber, seat of government moves back to Paris
  • 1880 Bastille Day, return of Communards

7
Jules Ferry (1832-93)
8
Lecture outline
  • Anti-clericalism
  • Republicanism and education
  • Overseas expansion

9
A brief history of anti-clericalism
  • Catholic/secular divide a major faultline in
    nineteenth century France
  • Revolutionary attacks on the church (seen as a
    bastion of tradition and hierarchy) by
    sans-culottes and revolutionary governments,
    including the Terror (1790s)
  • Catholic armed resistance especially in the
    Vendée

10
1801 Napoleon signs the Concordant with the Pope
normalizes state-church relations after decade
of revolutionary upheaval
11
Republican beef with Catholicism
  • Tradition and superstition v. reason and science
    (Charles X and the royal touch)
  • Catholics reactionary and monarchist -
    undemocratic
  • Pope Puis IXs Syllabus of Errors (1863)
  • Ultramontanism and Jesuits- unpatriotic and
    malignant influence over French society

12
The seductive Jesuit
  • How many convents have opened the door to them.
    Deceived by their sweet voice and now they speak
    firmly there, and everyone is afraid, everyone
    smiles while trembling, and everyone does what
    that say.
  • Jules Michelet and Edgar Quinet, quoted in
    Verhoeven, Neither Male nor Female, 45

13
The (alleged) power of Jesuit education
  • Under the Second Empire they have made
    enormous progress in our country, and have
    particularly sought to take control of the
    education of our youth, in order to destroy the
    principles which our society is built on and to
    mould the new generations in the ideas of
    clericalism.
  • Larousse encyclopaedia (1877)

14
The Sacré-Coeur, Paris
15
  • For eighty years two world views have been
    present, dividing hearts and minds and fomenting
    conflict, a desperate war in the heart of
    society. The lack of unity in education means
    that we have been continually thrown from revolt
    to repression, from anarchy to dictatorship,
    without any chance of stability
  • Léon Gambetta

16
Republicans promote secularization
  • Clericalism is the enemy Gambetta in 1877
  • Petitions, celebrations of Voltaire, hero of the
    enlightenment
  • Anticlerical decrees e.g 29 March 1880 Jesuits
    dissolved
  • Lay education in state-run schools

17
The secular education laws
  • Jules Ferry Law of 16 June 1881 education free
    in public primary schools and teachers must
    possess brevet
  • Jules Ferry Law of 28 March 1882 education
    compulsory and secular
  • State training colleges for female teachers
    (Camille Sée Law of 1881)

18
Impact of Ferrys Laws
  • Schoolhouse became a secular, republican space
    within the village
  • Literacy rates increased to 90 by 1900 and
    school attendance rose to 95 (although some
    child labour continued)

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Anon. PELLERIN Cie(imprimeur, éditeur),
NOTRE-DAME DE LOURDES, third quarter of
nineteenth century print
21
Loudres grotto in 1858
22
Loudres grotto in 1914
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Brunos The tour of France by two children
(1877) quasi-religious patriotism.
26
The end of the Concordat
  • Emile Combes and Republican campaign against
    Catholic Church 1901-1905
  • Law of Associations (1901)
  • Law of December 1905 separates the church and the
    state
  • Creation of the république laïque secular
    Republic

27
The French Empire before 1870
  • Napoleon Martinique and Guadeloupe in the
    Caribbean, Guyana in South America, the city of
    St Louis in Senegal
  • July Monarchy (1830-1848) and the Second Empire
    (1851-1870) Senegal, SE Asia
  • Charles X orders conquest of Algeria in 1830
  • Louis-Philippe (1839) Algeria is a land forever
    French.

28
Nationalist opposition to colonialism
I have said it before and I repeat that before
going to plant the French flag where it has never
flown, we should replant it where it has flown
before, where we have all seen it with our own
eyes. Paul Déroulède (1884)
29
Colonial expansion into Africa under the Third
Republic
  • Expedition into Tunisia (1881), making the
    country a virtual protectorate
  • Senegal becomes French West Africa in 1895
  • Madagascar becomes colony in 1895
  • Establishment of the French Congo after
    expedition by Pierre Savorgnan de Brazza

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Colonial Expansion why?
  • Economic reasons new markets to make good the
    disadvantages of protectionism
  • Maintaining Frances status as a great nation
    (Ferry)
  • Ernest Renan in 1871 colonization was a
    political necessity a nation that doesnt
    colonize is irrevocably destined for socialism.
  • Colonial lobbies

33
Colonialism as a way of rejuvenating the French
nation?
Not only because of a taste for adventure and
travel am I a committed colonialist I have found
in our colonies the finest practical school
where, as in a crucible, our race can be tempered
and recast. Marshal Lyautey (1907)
34
Ferry on the civilizing mission
  • We must say openly that indeed the higher races
    have a right over the lower races ... I repeat,
    that the superior races have a right because they
    have a duty. They have the duty to civilize the
    inferior races.... In the history of earlier
    centuries these duties, gentlemen, have often
    been misunderstood and certainly when the
    Spanish soldiers and explorers introduced slavery
    into Central America, they did not fulfill their
    duty as men of a higher race.... But, in our
    time, I maintain that European nations acquit
    themselves with generosity, with grandeur, and
    with sincerity of this superior civilizing duty.

35
The paradox of democratic empire
  • Take the civilizing mission seriously
  • Revolutions legacy of universal rights and
    Frances role in spreading them inspired Third
    Republic
  • France would bring light to unenlightened
    Africa
  • But on the ground racism and oppression
    co-existed with universalism/rights
  • See Conklin, Colonialism and Human Rights,
    American Historical Review (1998)

36
A racist republic?
  • The Third Republic simultaneously invested in
    political universality and particularity.
  • Belief in republican ideas co-existed alongside
    racism and a fear of difference
  • Assumption that the colonized were inferior to
    Europeans prevented the former from becoming
    citizens
  • See G Wilder, The French Imperial Nation-State
    (2005)

37
The civilizing mission at home and abroad
  • Educating supposedly backward peoples in
    Algeria and the Massif Central (see Colonna)
  • Fighting filth in France and Vietnam (see Barnes
    and Vann)
  • Catholic involvement in the civilizing mission
    complicates Rep/Cath divide narrative

38
Conclusion
  • Importance of viewing metropole and empire in
    tandem and as interlinked
  • Similar processes afoot in France and its
    colonies (a legacy from Revolutionary
    republicanism) state centralization,
    bureaucratic administration, specialized
    governmental knowledge.
  • France an imperial nation-state, (Wilder, 2005)
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