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Religion, Politics and Preferment in France since 1890

Religion, Politics and Preferment in France since 1890

Religion, Politics and Preferment in France since 1890

La Belle Epoque and its Legacy
Maurice Larkin, University of Edinburgh
August 2002
Available
Paperback
9780521522700

    This book is the first to investigate the problems that committed Catholics allegedly faced if they sought careers in state employment under the Third Republic in France. Using ministerial, Masonic, and ecclesiastical archives, including Vatican papers hitherto unused, it examines the factors underlying these discriminatory attitudes--notably the claims of Catholic involvement in the right-wing subversive activities of the late 1890s--while later chapters explore the degree to which these attitudes evaporated under later regimes, despite the traumas of the Vichy years.

    • The first book to investigate the unusual subject of religious and political discrimination in France from the 1890s to the present day
    • Elegantly and stylishly written
    • Uses a vast array of church and state archives, including hitherto unknown Vatican material

    Reviews & endorsements

    "Not the least of this volume's strengths is its evocation of a bygone era when family values sustained rather than undermined the welfare state." Philip Nord, Princeton University

    "Maurice Larkin's work is unquestionably important to our understanding of the politics of preferment and exclusion on the basis of religious belief in modern France. Larkin is the preeminent scholar of the Catholic Church and religious politics in modern France. This little book, his revision of the Wiles lectures given at Queens University, Belfast, in 1986, is important and ground-breaking scholarship. At the same time, the issues it addresses evoke our understanding of the shaping of the political culture of individuals and groups who have been marginalized by prejudice and discrimination....This work is a professional historian's delight as Larkin brings to this study a fascinating ability to convey the complicated diplomatic and domestic relations between various Catholic groups and anti-regime forces.' Myrna Chase, History

    "The suthor writes in a clear and forceful, often witty, style which is a joy to read. This valuable, well-researched, and remarkable work clarifies the church-state problem such as the attitudes of the Vatican, the role of the Grand Orient in supporting republican policies, especially in the Affaire des fiches of 1904." Walter D. Gray, The Catholic Historical Review

    "An engaging and valuable study." Choice

    See more reviews

    Product details

    August 2002
    Paperback
    9780521522700
    264 pages
    234 × 156 × 20 mm
    0.492kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Preface
    • Part I. As It Was: Catholic and the Republic 1890–1914:
    • 1. Ralliés et dérailleurs: Catholics and subversion
    • 2. Le sabre et le goupillon: Catholics and the army
    • 3. Raison d'état, raison d'église: the Roman dimension
    • Part II. As It Was: Catholics and State Employment:
    • 4. Problems and principles
    • 5. Patterns of preferment
    • 6. Ronds-de-cuir, genoux de chameau: other sectors
    • 7. The Brotherhood at work
    • 8. Marianne at school
    • Part III. As It Became:
    • 1914–1994:
    • 9. La grande illusion? 1914–1939
    • 10. The leopard's spots, 1940–1960
    • 11. Croquet through the looking glass: rules and identity in question, 1960–1994
    • Notes
    • Sources.
      Author
    • Maurice Larkin , University of Edinburgh