On courage as well as cowardice: Jérôme Garcin on literature during the Occupation

In "Des mots et des actes: les belles-lettres sous l'Occupation" (Gallimard, 2024), Jérôme Garcin presents a morally incisive analysis of the French literary scene during the German occupation, demonstrating how words could become tools of subjugation or resistance. Through pointed portraits of collaborators such as Brasillach, Céline, Morand, and Chardonne, as well as resistance figures like Prévost, Decour, and Lusseyran, he shows that literary genius does not relativize moral guilt but rather exacerbates it. His guiding principle is the "échelle de Prévost," a scale he developed to assess the connection between ethical stance and literary practice. Garcin reveals how a cultural elite maintained a vibrant Parisian cultural life despite mass murder and repression, and how an aesthetic cult surrounding collaborationist authors persists to this day, while resistance writers are marginalized. The book is simultaneously a historical reckoning, a moral appeal, and an intellectual self-portrait of a reader who abandons "innocent reading." The review highlights the work's dual nature: the historical reconstruction of the literary field under occupation and Garcin's self-critical revision of his own approach to reading. It emphasizes that Garcin challenges the traditional separation of work and author, revealing the persistence of a French "aesthetic amnesia" that shows admiration for collaborators and only dutiful respect for resistance fighters. The review elaborates how Garcin connects literary portraits with structural arguments (the CNE, generational conflicts, social milieus), thereby initiating a moral re-canonization that rehabilitates responsibility as an indispensable category of literary criticism. Overall, the review reads the book as an urgent contribution against the trivialization of cultural betrayal – and as a manifesto against the continuing mythical aura surrounding the “geniuses” of hatred.

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Rentrée littéraire: contemporary French literature
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