Past Imperfect: French Intellectuals, 1944-1956
Tony Judt. University of California Press, $45 (348pp) ISBN 978-0-520-07921-2
Swept up in the vortex of communism, French postwar intellectuals developed a blind spot to Stalinist tyranny. Albert Camus, who had been an authentic moral voice of the Resistance, pretended not to know about the crimes and terrors of the Soviet Union. Jean-Paul Sartre perverted logic to make an apologia for the Soviet invasion of Hungary. Simone de Beauvoir called for social change to be brought about in a single convulsion, or else not at all. Foolish French thinkers, suffering ``self-imposed moral anesthesia,'' defended the credibility of the show trials in Stalinized Eastern Europe. In a devastating study, Judt, a professor of European studies at New York University, argues that the belief system of postwar intellectuals, propped up by faith in communism, reflected fatal weaknesses in French culture such as the fragility of the liberal tradition and the penchant for grand theory. He also strips away the postwar myth that the small, fighting French Resistance was assisted by the mass of the nation. (Nov.)
Details
Reviewed on: 11/30/1992
Genre: Nonfiction
Other - 359 pages - 978-0-8147-4392-8
Paperback - 348 pages - 978-0-8147-4356-0
Paperback - 348 pages - 978-0-520-08650-0