During the First World War, the French army deployed more than
500,000 colonial subjects to European battlefields. The struggle
against a common enemy associated these soldiers with the French
nation, but racial and cultural differences left them on the
outside. This study investigates French conceptions of race and
national identity at the time as reflected in the attitudes and
policies directed toward these soldiers.
How far did French egalitarianism extend in welcoming and
disciplining nonwhite troops? Using the experiences of African and
Asian colonial soldiers, Richard S. Fogarty examines how tensions
between racial prejudices and strong traditions of republican
universalism and egalitarianism resulted in often contradictory and
paradoxical policies. Employing a socially and culturally
integrated approach to the history of warfare that connects
military and political policies with the society and culture in
which they developed, Fogarty presents a fresh picture of how the
French came to deal with race relations, religious differences, and
French identity itself.
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