Bringing The Empire Back Home: France In The Global Age

(Hardcover - Aug 2004)
by

Herman Lebovics

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Publisher: Duke University Press



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Book: Bringing The Empire Back Home: France In The Global Age
"How--and even whether--to preserve their once-homogeneous culture in today's open world is one of France's supreme challenges today. With five sharply-etched case studies of cultural conflict--from the world soccer cup to museums to the defense of the Larzac plateau--Herman Lebovics casts penetrating light on French struggles to establish who they are and who they want to be."--Robert O. Paxton, author of "Europe in the 20th Century"

"As usual, Herman Lebovics gives us an innovative and stimulating new perspective, now, on France in the age of globalization."--Patrick Weil, senior research fellow at the National Center for Scientific Research (University of Paris I-Sorbonne) and author of "Qu'est-ce qu'un Francais? Histoire de la nationalite francaise depuis la Revolution "("What is a Frenchman? The History of French Nationality from the Revolution to the Present Day")

"Scholars have been talking for some time about the colonial 'legacies' of the postcolonial present. French scholars have only recently and tentatively entered that conversation. "Bringing the Empire Back Home" makes an analytic and political leap as it takes us to new terrain of insight and locations of connection. Herman Lebovics's version of what counts as French history is compelling, powerful, sensible, and deep. In setting out the direct lines between decolonization in the l960s and the antiglobalization movements that followed, he traces what joined New Caledonian separatists and Larzac farmers, protests against the 'postcolonial military-industrial complex' and the rise of the radical right, the new regionalisms in France in the l970s and the folk hero Bove who smashed McDonald's windows. He identifieshow imperial and capitalist expansion have been challenged in forms of popular demonstration, ingenuity, and spectacle that have repeatedly called into question what the 'Republic' is, who has a right to decide its boundaries, and who has what rights in it today. This is a must read that redefines the tenor and terrain of postcolonial scholarship."--Ann Laura Stoler, author of "Race and the Education of Desire: Foucault's" History of Sexuality "and the Colonial Order of Things"

Thirty years ago, an international antiglobalization movement was born in the grazing lands of France's Larzac plateau. In the 1970s, Larzac farmers were joined by others from around the world in their efforts to prevent the expansion of a local military base: by ecologists, religious pacifists, and urban leftists, and by social activists including American Indians and South American peasant leaders. In 1999 some of the same farmers who had fought the expansion of the base in the 1970s--including Jose Bove--dismantled the new local McDonald's. That gesture was part of a protest against U.S. tariffs on specified French exports including Roquefort cheese, the region's primary market product. The two struggles--the one against expanding a French army camp intended to train troops for postcolonial wars, the other against American economic might--were landmarks in the global campaign to preserve local cultures. They were also key episodes in the decades-long attempt by the French to define their cultural heritage within a much changed nation, a new Europe, and, especially, an American-dominated world.
In "Bringing the Empire Back Home," the inventive cultural historian Herman Lebovics provides a riveting account of how intense disputes about what it means to be French have played out over the past half-century, redefining Paris, the regions, and the former colonies in relation to one another and the world at large. In a narrative populated with peasants, people from the former colonies, museum curators, former colonial administrators, left Christians, archaeologists, anthropologists, soccer players and their teenage fans, and, yes, leading government officials, Lebovics revealscontemporary French society and cultures as perhaps the West's most important testing grounds of pluralism and assimilation. A lively cultural history, "Bringing the Empire Back Home" highlights not only the political significance of France's efforts to synthesize the regional, national, European, ethnic postcolonial, and global but also the chaotic beauty of the endeavor.

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Details of Book: Bringing The Empire Back Home: France In The Global Age Book: Bringing The Empire Back Home: France In The Global Age
Author: Herman Lebovics
ISBN:

0822332604


ISBN-13:

9780822332602

,

978-0822332602


Binding: Hardcover
Publishing Date: Aug 2004
Publisher: Duke University Press
Number of Pages: 232
Language: English
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    Book: Bringing The Empire Back Home: France In The Global Age by Herman Lebovics
    ISBN Number: 0822332604, 9780822332602, 978-0822332602