This chapter uses as a case study of the French National Railways (SNCF) and its multiple identities in German occupied France during World War II. During the war and the eight decades that followed, the SNCF has been storied multiple ways. The company perceived itself as a victim during the occupation, but for the first fifty years after the war was storied as a national hero because of the role some railway workers played in the resistance. Then, in the 1990s, the company found itself storied as a perpetrator for its role in transporting over 75,000 deportees crammed in merchandise cars towards concentration camps. Which identity is true? All of these positions can be argued without contorting history. Rather than trying to find the true ...
This dissertation interrogates the relation between the French national identity, constructed around...
French railway workers played no part in the historic Popular Front strikes and workplace occupation...
abstract: After the First World War, citizens, soldiers, and political figures alike thought they ha...
Why did railway workers never sabotage the deportation trains? This article examines the role of Fre...
Why did railway workers never sabotage the deportation trains? This article examines the role of Fre...
Only one French railway worker has been honoured as a Righteous Amongst the Nations for rescuing Jew...
In 1940, France, threatened with total annexation by Nazi Germany, signed an armistice agreement wit...
Genocide studies considers the accountability various of perpetrators, as well as the needs mass atr...
Focusing on those French collaborators who fought for the Nazis as members of the Legion of French V...
Fellow Travellers examines the shifting practices and strategies adopted by Communist militants as t...
This thesis is an exploration of the tensions within French Communist identity as leaders and milita...
During World War II, France’s rapid and unexpected defeat was followed by the German occupation of t...
This thesis is an exploration of the tensions within French Communist identity as leaders and milita...
The SNCF Staff Regulations was questioned since the 1980’s. Popular misconceptions, sometimes grotes...
The German railway system heralded the country’s much-desired advancement towards modernity and pros...
This dissertation interrogates the relation between the French national identity, constructed around...
French railway workers played no part in the historic Popular Front strikes and workplace occupation...
abstract: After the First World War, citizens, soldiers, and political figures alike thought they ha...
Why did railway workers never sabotage the deportation trains? This article examines the role of Fre...
Why did railway workers never sabotage the deportation trains? This article examines the role of Fre...
Only one French railway worker has been honoured as a Righteous Amongst the Nations for rescuing Jew...
In 1940, France, threatened with total annexation by Nazi Germany, signed an armistice agreement wit...
Genocide studies considers the accountability various of perpetrators, as well as the needs mass atr...
Focusing on those French collaborators who fought for the Nazis as members of the Legion of French V...
Fellow Travellers examines the shifting practices and strategies adopted by Communist militants as t...
This thesis is an exploration of the tensions within French Communist identity as leaders and milita...
During World War II, France’s rapid and unexpected defeat was followed by the German occupation of t...
This thesis is an exploration of the tensions within French Communist identity as leaders and milita...
The SNCF Staff Regulations was questioned since the 1980’s. Popular misconceptions, sometimes grotes...
The German railway system heralded the country’s much-desired advancement towards modernity and pros...
This dissertation interrogates the relation between the French national identity, constructed around...
French railway workers played no part in the historic Popular Front strikes and workplace occupation...
abstract: After the First World War, citizens, soldiers, and political figures alike thought they ha...