- Published in print:
- 2012
- Published Online:
- June 2013
- ISBN:
- 9780804774574
- eISBN:
- 9780804782838
- Item type:
- chapter
- Publisher:
- Stanford University Press
- DOI:
- 10.11126/stanford/9780804774574.003.0007
- Subject:
- History, Cultural History
This chapter examines the rhetoric published in the pages of Je Suis Partout, which dealt with issues of race, culture, and fascism. Throughout the 1930s, Je Suis Partout became known for its open ...
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This chapter examines the rhetoric published in the pages of Je Suis Partout, which dealt with issues of race, culture, and fascism. Throughout the 1930s, Je Suis Partout became known for its open embrace of fascist regimes across Europe, its violent denunciation of French politics at home and abroad, and its violent anti-Semitism. In the wake of the “failed days of February 1934,” the accession to power of the Popular Front, the Spanish Civil War, and the growing “bolchevization of Europe,” far-right journalists and intellectuals produced an increasingly violent rhetoric, insulting, denouncing, and berating the politicians and intellectuals they deemed to constitute the “anti-France”.Less
This chapter examines the rhetoric published in the pages of Je Suis Partout, which dealt with issues of race, culture, and fascism. Throughout the 1930s, Je Suis Partout became known for its open embrace of fascist regimes across Europe, its violent denunciation of French politics at home and abroad, and its violent anti-Semitism. In the wake of the “failed days of February 1934,” the accession to power of the Popular Front, the Spanish Civil War, and the growing “bolchevization of Europe,” far-right journalists and intellectuals produced an increasingly violent rhetoric, insulting, denouncing, and berating the politicians and intellectuals they deemed to constitute the “anti-France”.