A major contribution to the study of collective identity and memory
in France, this book examines a French republican myth: the belief
that the nation can be adequately defended only by its own
citizens, in the manner of the French revolutionaries of 1793. Alan
Forrest examines the image of the citizen army reflected in
political speeches, school textbooks, art and literature across the
nineteenth century. He reveals that the image appealed to notions
of equality and social justice, and with time it expanded to
incorporate Napoleon's victorious legions, the partisans who
repelled the German invader in 1814 and the people of Paris who
rose in arms to defend the Republic in 1870. More recently it has
risked being marginalized by military technology and by the
realities of colonial warfare, but its influence can still be seen
in the propaganda of the Great War and of the French Resistance
under Vichy.
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