Emigre New York
French Intellectuals in Wartime Manhattan, 1940-1944
By Jeffrey Mehlman (Boston University)
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Wartime New York was the city where French Symbolism, in the person of Maurice Maeterlinck, came to live out its last productive years; where French surrealism, in the person of Andre Breton, came to survive; and where French structuralism, in the person of Claude Levi-Strauss, came to be born. From the largely forgotten pre-war visit to the city of Petain and Laval to the seizing, burning and capsizing of the "Normandie", France's floating museum, in the Hudson River, Jeffrey Mehlman evokes the writerly world of French Manhattan, its achievements and feuds, during one of the most vexed periods of French history. In this volume, a series of portraits emerges against the backdrop of an over-riding irony: the United States, the world's principal hope in the battle against Hitler's barbarism, was for the most part more eager to deal with Petain's collaborationist regime than with what Secretary of State Cordell Hull called de Gaulle's "so-called Free French" movement.
- ISBN:
- 9780801862861
- Format:
- Hardback
- Pages:
- 216
- Published:
- Publisher:
- Johns Hopkins University Press
- Imprint:
- Johns Hopkins University Press
- Weight:
- 454 g