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(en) France, UCL AL #365 - Culture - Read: Jean-Paul Demoule, "Eternal France: An Archaeological Investigation" (ca, de, fr, it, pt, tr)[machine translation]

Date Fri, 19 Dec 2025 07:58:04 +0200


In this book, archaeologist and prehistorian Jean-Paul Demoule explores the relevance of national identity and roots. He follows a well-documented path in search of the markers of French nationality from prehistoric times to the present day. Across a dozen chapters, arranged chronologically, he nuances or denounces false national ties to the past. His refutations are reasoned, "opposing fantasies with the strict reality of historical facts."

A nationality is a territory, and that of France has constantly been modified, with some opting for an octagon, others for a pentagon, before the hexagonal shape was accepted with the republican school system of the late 19th century.

A nationality is also a people, where we should be talking about the continuous mixing of different populations and cultures. A nation also includes women, who were excluded from citizenship. These women, in the 1920s, were deprived of their nationality simply by marrying a foreigner. Nationality, they argued, was defined by a language-not a Germanic language derived from Frankish, but a Romance language, a product of Roman colonization. A French language, which, in the mid-19th century, nine-tenths of the French population spoke little or not at all, using regional languages. "It is precisely through the suppression of regional languages that French imposed its dominance."

While De Gaulle, in 1959, offered a synthesis of the concept of the French nation in the formula "a European people of the white race, of Greek and Latin culture, and of the Christian religion," a formula that has been repeated many times, the author unravels the threads that connect the Christian religion to Roman, Gallic, Jewish, and even pagan beliefs. Until the 8th century, pagan customs persisted... not to mention the Cult of the Supreme Being during the French Revolution. Today, only a third of French people who identify as believers belong to the Catholic faith. As for the national call to be white, besides its contradiction with the French Constitution, the concept itself is absurd.

Then there is the symbolism: the flag, which has had many ups and downs, including the return to the white flag; the Marseillaise, tolerated during the July Monarchy and then banned under Napoleon III; Marianne, which itself suffered many setbacks under Napoleon III. And then there is the Trinitarian motto, which had many misfortunes and was even suppressed by the other Pétainist trio.

Culture? A sense of belonging? Enemies? These are all avenues of identity that Jean-Paul Demoule intelligently refutes. An informative and well-structured journey, written in clear and accessible language, to understand and appreciate a country of mixed heritage, a country defined by diversity. The aim here is not "to invent and glorify myths, but to provide the tools for a clear-eyed understanding of the past[...]to build a society with full awareness and to rediscover empathy."

Dominique Sureau (UCL Angers)

Jean-Paul Demoule, *Eternal France: An Archaeological Investigation*, La Fabrique, 2025, 280 pages, EUR17.

https://www.unioncommunistelibertaire.org/?Lire-Jean-Paul-Demoule-La-France-eternelle-une-enquete-archeologique
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