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Title

National Memory: The Duty to Remember, the Need to Forget.

Authors

Koven, Ronald

Abstract

This article examines the struggle of France over which memories should make up their history. Throughout much of its past, France, more than most other countries, has been engaged in actual or cold civil wars punctuated by more or less long periods of national reconciliation that have required a need to forget. At least that is what a succession of recent French leaders, including four very different presidents of the Fifth Republic have maintained, explicitly or implicitly. Their appeals to national unity, implying the sacrifice of certain grievances, have inevitably met with protests from groups who have felt that they were being asked to give up pieces of their collective memory.

Subjects

FRANCE; FRENCH history; HISTORY; MEMORY; COLLECTIVE memory

Publication

Society, 1995, Vol 32, Issue 6, p52

ISSN

0147-2011

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1007/BF02693371

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