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Created page with ''''Vichy Syndrome''' is the political trauma caused by French government's collaboration with Nazi Germany during World War II. It is based on the false claim that France liberated itself during World War II, and was not involved in Holocaust on other war crimes committed by Axis powers. After the war, Charles de Gaulle denied any links between France and Nazi Germany, and engaged in political revisionism declaring that "The Republic [had] never ceased to e...'
 
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'''Vichy Syndrome''' is the political trauma caused by French government's collaboration with Nazi Germany during World War II. It is based on the false claim that France liberated itself during World War II, and was not involved in Holocaust on other war crimes committed by Axis powers. After the war, Charles de Gaulle denied any links between France and Nazi Germany, and engaged in political revisionism declaring that "The Republic [had] never ceased to exist" and "Vichy was and is null and void." In reality, France was liberated by the Allied troops in 1944 and the resistance movement spearheaded by partisan forces, and France's collaboration with Germans was whitewashed. Gaulle too knew that what he told was a fabrication but told one of his assistants that following June 1940 he always "acted as if..." This false narrative created the founding myth of post-Vichy France, and it closely intertwined with the question on how France should face the history to recognize its stake in the Holocaust and how this period should be oriented in French national memory.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Rousso |first=Henry |title=The Vichy Syndrome: History and Memory in France since 1944 |publisher=Harvard University Press |year=1991}}</ref>{{Rp|pages=vii-x, 15-19}}
'''Vichy Syndrome''' is the political trauma caused by the French government's collaboration with Nazi Germany during World War II. It is based on the false claim that France liberated itself during World War II, and was not involved in Holocaust on other war crimes committed by Axis powers. After the war, Charles de Gaulle denied any links between France and Nazi Germany, and engaged in political revisionism declaring that "The Republic [had] never ceased to exist" and "Vichy was and is null and void." In reality, France was liberated by the Allied troops in 1944 and the resistance movement spearheaded by partisan forces, and France's collaboration with Germans was whitewashed. Gaulle too knew that what he told was a fabrication but told one of his assistants that following June 1940 he always "acted as if..." This false narrative created the founding myth of post-Vichy France, and it closely intertwined with the question on how France should face the history to recognize its stake in the Holocaust and how this period should be oriented in French national memory.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Rousso |first=Henry |title=The Vichy Syndrome: History and Memory in France since 1944 |publisher=Harvard University Press |year=1991}}</ref>{{Rp|pages=vii-x, 15-19}}


== Bibliography ==
== Bibliography ==

Revision as of 20:41, 2 November 2022

Vichy Syndrome is the political trauma caused by the French government's collaboration with Nazi Germany during World War II. It is based on the false claim that France liberated itself during World War II, and was not involved in Holocaust on other war crimes committed by Axis powers. After the war, Charles de Gaulle denied any links between France and Nazi Germany, and engaged in political revisionism declaring that "The Republic [had] never ceased to exist" and "Vichy was and is null and void." In reality, France was liberated by the Allied troops in 1944 and the resistance movement spearheaded by partisan forces, and France's collaboration with Germans was whitewashed. Gaulle too knew that what he told was a fabrication but told one of his assistants that following June 1940 he always "acted as if..." This false narrative created the founding myth of post-Vichy France, and it closely intertwined with the question on how France should face the history to recognize its stake in the Holocaust and how this period should be oriented in French national memory.[1]: vii–x, 15–19 

Bibliography

  1. ^ Rousso, Henry (1991). The Vichy Syndrome: History and Memory in France since 1944. Harvard University Press.