France on Trial

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What to expect

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Few images more shocked the French population during the Occupation than the photograph of Marshal Philippe Pétain - the great French hero of the First World War - shaking the hand of Hitler on 20 October 1940. In the radio speech after this meeting, Pétain said 'It is I alone who will be judged by History.' Five years later, in July 1945, the hour of judegment - if not yet the judgement of History - arrived. Pétain was brought before a specially created High Court to answer for his conduct between the signing of the armistice with Germany in June 1940 and the Liberation of France in August 1944.

Julian Jackson uses Pétain's three-week trial as a lens through which to examine the central crisis of twentieth-century French history. As head of the Vichy regime, Pétain became one of France's most notorious public figures, and the lightening-rod for collective guilt and retribution immediately after the Second World War. In France on Trial Jackson blends politics and personal drama to explore how different national factions sought to try to claim the past, or establish their interpretation of it, as a way of claiming the present and future.

©2023 Julian Jackson (P)2023 Penguin Audio

Critics Review

  • Julian Jackson brings to life here with his customary mastery the trial in 1945 of France’s highest ranking military officer, accused of having betrayed his country. Philippe Pétain knew extremes of glory and shame in his long military career. In 1919, as the supreme commander of French armies in World War I, he rode down the Champs-Elysées at the head of a victory parade. After June 1940, with almost unlimited power and prestige, he governed France under German occupation. In 1945 he sat in a French courtroom charged with treason for his exercise of that power. In this compelling book, Julian Jackson gives the reader a seat in the jury box and then follows France’s debate over Petain – hero or traitor? – over the next fifty years.

    Robert Paxton, Mellon Professor Emeritus of Social Science, Columbia University
  • The great general of the First World War, collaborator with Germany in the Second, how is Marshal Philippe Pétain to be remembered? His trial on charges of treason divided the French in 1945 and has divided them ever since. In the hands of Julian Jackson, a superb historian with the sensibility of a novelist, this is a story not just about Pétain but about war and resistance, the moral compromises of leadership and the meaning of France itself.

    Margaret MacMillan, Emeritus Professor of International History, University of Oxford
  • A superb book … Jackson is that rare beast: a distinguished academic historian who writes with flair and clarity… one could almost be buried in a work of high-class fiction… 5/5 stars

    Sunday Telegraph
  • If… cowardice, bad faith, dishonour and moral ambivalence is your thing, read on… A highly talented storyteller, Jackson certainly knows how to set the scene… What is chilling in Jackson’s beautifully researched and meticulous account of the trial is the hopeless mediocrity of almost all people involved in it: from judges and jurors (résistants and parliamentarians) to lawyers prosecutors and witnesses.

    Observer
  • Julian Jackson, the foremost historian of the period, here provides a magisterial account of this extraordinary yet also somehow squalid courtroom drama and its context. … [A] fine, thought-provoking book.

    Sunday Times
  • A splendid book … The central narrative of the trial grips like a thriller … Jackson’s vivid prose is leavened by wit and sharpened by telling details … This is a substantial achievement by a historian at the top of his game.

    Literary Review

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