
Historians agree: the diary of Léon Werth (1878-1955) is one of the most precious--and readable--pieces of testimony ever written about life in France under Nazi occupation and the Vichy regime. Werth was a free-spirited and unclassifiable writer. He is the author of eleven novels, art and dance criticism, acerbic political reporting, and memorable personal essays. He was Jewish, and left Paris in June 1940 to hide out in his wife's country house in Saint-Amour, a small village in the Jura Mountains. His short memoir 33 Days recounts his struggle to get there. Deposition tells of daily life in the village, on nearby farms and towns, and finally back in Paris, where he draws the portrait of a Resistance network in his apartment and writes an eyewitness report of the insurrection that freed the city in August, 1944.From Saint-Amour, we see both the Resistance in the countryside, derailing troop trains, punishing notorious collaborators--and growing repression: arrests, torture, deportation, and executions. Above all, we see how Vichy and the Occupation affect the lives of farmers and villagers and how their often contradictory attitudes evolve from 1940-1944. Werth's ear for dialogue and novelist's gift for creating characters animate the diary: in the markets and in town, we meet real French peasants and shopkeepers, railroad men and the patronne of the café at the station, schoolteachers and gendarmes. They come off the page alive, and the countryside and villages come alive with them. With biting irony, Werth records, almost daily, what Vichy-German propaganda was saying on the radio and in the press. We follow the progress of the war as people did then, day by day. These entries make interesting, often amusing reading, a stark contrast with his gripping entries on the persecution and deportation of the Jews. Deposition is a varied and complex piece of living history, and a pleasure to read.
This work investigates the lived reality and shifting social attitudes of French citizens under the constraints of Nazi occupation and the Vichy regime between 1940 and 1944. Léon Werth, a writer and intellectual, utilizes his position as a hidden observer in the Jura Mountains to document the granular details of daily existence, political propaganda, and the escalating violence of the era. His account serves as a primary source record of how rural and urban populations navigated the moral and physical pressures of the occupation.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Historians and scholars frequently cite this diary as a foundational and highly readable primary source for understanding the social climate of occupied France. Experts emphasize the value of Werth's novelist background, which provides a unique, character-driven perspective that distinguishes this work from more clinical historical accounts.
Page Count:
365
Publication Date:
2018-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190499567
ISBN-13:
9780190499563
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