Abstract
Margaret Atack's work offers a clear insight into the enduring paradoxes of the Occupation and its aftermath. She suggests that novels of Unity written during the Occupation were followed by novels of Ambiguity which reflected the social and moral confusions that haunted France through the post-war period. This is confirmed by the main cultural movements of the 1940s, which struggled to articulate a national spirit that could manage the polarisations of the Occupation. The complex legacy of ambiguities is exemplified by the Catholic personalist movement around Emmanuel Mounier and the review Esprit, whose itinerary is examined from its foundation in 1932. The period of publication under the Vichy Regime in particular posed painful dilemmas which left a legacy of ambiguities when Esprit emerged as a leading literary and philosophical review in the post-war period. The review's trajectory suggests that ambiguity may be the price to be paid for national unity and that unity is always provisional.
Introduction
Margaret Atack's work offers a sharp insight into the paradoxes of the Occupation and its aftermath. In her major study of the literature of the period (Atack, 1989) she suggests that novels of Unity written during the Occupation were followed by novels of Ambiguity which reflected the social and moral confusions that haunted France through the post-war period. Her analysis of literary tendencies could be extended to the intellectual and cultural movements of the 1940s, which reflected the polarisations of the Occupation but struggled to find ways of transforming them into a narrative of unity. This complex web of ambiguities was articulated by the existentialists and by the Catholic personalists. The movement around Emmanuel Mounier and the review Esprit exemplifies the issues. Ambiguities attended the movement's itinerary from its foundation in 1932 in the polarising climate of confrontation. The journal's publication under the Vichy Regime posed painful dilemmas and left a legacy of ambiguities. Its trajectory suggests that ambiguity may be the price to be paid for national unity and that unity is always provisional.
Les années noires 1940–1944
The reference to the ‘dark years’ of Occupation and collaboration is now a standard chronological rubric for the years 1940–1944. The term was launched by the publication of wartime diaries by Jean Guéhenno (1947), and since then has been endlessly used as shorthand for a multiplicity of experiences following the military defeat and political collapse of 1940 (Jackson, 2001). It was a post-war term reflecting painful memories of the German Occupation of the country, the establishment of the Vichy Regime, active collaboration for some, passive endurance for many, and the gradual emergence of resistance movements. It also reflects the deep ambiguities that permeated the lives of French people during the Occupation. However hostile they felt to the new institutions, no one could escape contact with the État français, established by Marshal Pétain or the German authorities who controlled the country either indirectly through Vichy or directly through the occupying forces and their military administration. Everyone had to confront the moral consequences of a fractured polity and of daily survival under conditions that blurred categories of guilt, shame, cowardice and heroism. The ambiguities were especially felt by the intellectuals, writers and artists, whose roles and livelihoods depended on their access to the public sphere. The designation of the period as ‘dark years’ suggested not only that they were difficult times, but also that it might be better to draw a veil over them or leave them in darkness. But however energetically the memory might be repressed, the ambiguities had profound and long-lasting consequences.
It is not then surprising that the cultural history of France in the 1940s is marked by competing narratives of unity and by persistent ambiguities – ethical, political and aesthetic – that accompany them. Margaret Atack's distinction between novels of Unity and novels of Ambiguity is an especially useful heuristic for thinking about how writers and intellectuals tried to make sense of these fractures (Atack, 1989). She groups the structures of narrative discourse in war novels into two periods. During the Occupation, novels focused on the aspiration to unity, bringing all of France together in a shared culture, bound together by a common humanity, against the grain of all the pressures to divide them. After the Allied liberation of French territory, novels depicted the fragmentation of that unity into ambiguities and irony.
Within the literary sphere, the conditions of Occupation produced a pervasive demand for narratives that could restore a sense of unity. Writers were constrained by censorship, by the public and clandestine markets and by the exigencies of personal survival. They therefore tended to produce fictions that foregrounded communal values, national continuity and moral clarity. Such novels of Unity often emphasised collective resilience, heroism in the face of oppression and an ethic of duty that could be read as implicitly anti-Occupation or, in some cases, congenial to conservative and paternalist visions of order. The pressure to imagine a coherent national community was not merely a rhetorical strategy but a psychological and political one. After the trauma of 1940, many readers and writers sought cultural forms that compensated for the dissolutions of authority and identity. And since the competing forces for and against the Vichy Regime each sought to present themselves as representative of the nation, the writers who aligned with them tended to imagine a national unity which both sides aspired to embody.
Yet even within attempts to narrate unity there were fractures. The choice to emphasise unity often occluded uncomfortable truths – about anti-semitic policy, about collaborationist elites and about social inequalities exposed by wartime shortages. The result is that the cultural works which aimed at unity often contained an underlying ambiguity, a condition that would only become more pronounced after 1944. In effect, the best-known novels of Unity were attempts by Resistance-oriented writers to find narratives that showed the common interest of French people in standing together against the Occupation forces. The occupants and their supporters were depicted as alienating people from their common humanity. A totemic novel like Le Silence de la mer by Vercors (1942), for example, depicted this in the struggle of a young French woman to resist her all too human attraction to a German officer who is billeted in her home. The depth of her struggle points to the internal conflict she had to overcome even while her refusal to yield betokens her commitment to a united national stance against the German Occupation.
The post-war narratives often represented the deep contradictions of the wartime experience more sharply, reflecting the difficulties of post-war reconstruction. The power balance between two opposing visions of France was now reversed as the post-war governments adopted the vision of the Resistance and Free French. Margaret Atack's essay in French Cultural Studies: An Introduction (Forbes and Kelly, 1995) argues that the post-war ethos is brilliantly encapsulated in Patrick Modiano's novel La Place de l’étoile (Modiano,1968), which describes the ‘madness of self-destructive incompatible identities’ (Atack, 1995: 91). The incompatibility refers to the conflict between the victorious internal Resistance and the Free French forces, on the one hand, and the defeated supporters of the Vichy Regime, together with the more aggressively pro-Nazi collaborators, on the other. Pierre Nora summarised this conflict as the condition of France being ‘mi-vainqueur, mi vaincu’ (Nora, 1989). The madness diagnosed by Modiano stems from the uneasy balance between the victorious and defeated sides within post-war France, and the inability of either side to command a clear majority within popular opinion. The public hegemony of the Resistance and Gaullist narratives resulted in the defeated side largely retreating into sullen silence for the initial post-war years. Building on Margaret Atack's insights, I would like to turn to the intellectual landscape of post-war France, to explore the political and moral questions that lie at the centre of the period, evoking the popular sensibility of existentialism, before focussing on the review Esprit and its director, Emmanuel Mounier, as a lens through which to view the larger paradox: unity achieved only at the cost of ambiguity.
Intellectual landscape of 1940s
In the immediate post-war period, the authoritarian and conservative world views that had rallied behind the collaborationist movements and Marshal Pétain counted among the vanquished and were largely silenced. The world views that had guided the internal and external Resistance forces were in fact extremely heterogenous. The most prominent were the nationalist ideology of General de Gaulle and the socialism of the Communist party (Parti communiste français (PCF)), but there were more conservative royalists to the Right of the General, and more revolutionary anarchists and Trotskyists to the Left of the Party. In between there were many shades of moral and political commitment, among whom the democratic socialists and the Christian democrats were the most numerous. In addition, the victorious groups were joined by a large number of people who associated themselves with the Liberation forces, having previously been non-committal about their wartime affiliations or having had a change of heart in the light of events. To make the situation even more complex, subsequent historians have frequently pointed to the striking resemblances between the ideas and policies of Vichy supporters and those professed by the post-war political groups, and to the degree of continuity from the one to the other (Jackson, 2001; Rousso, 1990).
It was not easy to find a common bond between the competing groups in this complex array of tendencies, but a viable route rapidly became visible through a shared revulsion inspired by the atrocities committed in the name of German Nazism. The imprisonments, deportations, large-scale executions and massacres committed in the latter months of the Occupation were already horrifying but were dwarfed by the revelations of the concentration camps and the Holocaust, which emerged throughout 1945. The gross inhumanity of Nazism sparked a surge of humanism, which quickly became the shared discourse of the Liberation. I have described the ‘Humanist Moment’ elsewhere (Kelly, 2004: 127–154) and suggested that it provided a ‘bonding agent for the bruised and divided French nation, enabling it to reconstruct national unity within a broad ideological consensus’ (p. 153). It was successful because it excluded no major strand of option and identity other than fascism. However, humanism in the French sense is set at the highest level of generality, and includes anyone, including religious believers, who acknowledge the value of human life. Inevitably, it is therefore open to multiple interpretations on any given specific issue. It is another example of unity encompassing internal conflicts and therefore ambiguities. At all events, for the first three years after the liberation of French territory it served as a common framework of thought.
Within the broad church of humanism, three main intellectual movements emerged to dominate the exchange of ideas in France. Claiming a common commitment to humanism, they aggregated around three main groups: the Marxists, existentialists and Catholic personalists. Of these, it was the existentialists who dominated public debate, not least because their ideas resonated with the deep ambiguities of the time. Simone de Beauvoir's trenchant essay, Pour une morale de l’ambiguïté (1947) pinpointed the political basis of the ambiguity: En un sens, l’attitude négative est facile; l’objet refusé est donné sans équivoque… ainsi tous les Français antifascistes étaient unis pendant l’occupation par leur commune résistance contre un seul oppresseur. Le retour au positif rencontre bien plus d’écueils, comme on l’a bien vu en France où ont ressuscité, en même temps que les partis, les divisions et les haines (Beauvoir, 1947: 190).
The unity of the Resistance movements, she argues, was based on a shared negative: opposition to the German Occupation. However, the unity declined after the defeat of the common enemy and was followed by a return to old divisions and hatreds. Writing in 1947, she was reflecting the dissolution of the brief post-war tripartite government of communists, socialists and Christian democrats, and the onset of the Cold War with its bitter polarities. However, she also saw this as the expression of a deeper challenge: C’est parce que la condition de l’homme est ambiguë qu’à travers l’échec et le scandale il cherche à sauver son existence (Beauvoir, 1947: 186).
Ambiguity, she argued, is an inherent feature of the human condition. Like her partner, Jean-Paul Sartre, she located ambiguity in the individual, torn between being in itself (être-en-soi) and being for itself (être-pour-soi), or between being and consciousness. From this root, ambiguity spread outwards into the collective sphere, opposing the individual to their ‘situation’, their material and social contexts. This analysis responded to the sense of anguish and anxiety, widely felt in France, by founding it in the constitutive opposition between human existence and our awareness of ourselves. It found great cultural traction in the conditions of the later 1940s, as social and political polarisations deepened.
The existentialist appeal to ambiguity found an echo in the Marxist dialectic of contradictory opposing forces as the motor of social development. Thinkers like Henri Lefebvre popularised the materialist dialectic as a recognition that both thought and being are based on contradictory movements (Lefebvre, 1940). He argued that as human beings emerged from nature, they were always conscious of the natural constraints that weighed on their intentions and aspirations. This was just one aspect of the kinds of alienation that attend human life, though most Marxists would tend to focus on the contradictions proceeding from the configuration of social life, for example between classes holding opposed interests in the process of production, and hence in the political and ideological domains. The ambiguities generated in this way therefore had their origin in social relations rather than in the individual situation.
Existentialist ambiguity also found an echo in the Catholic personalist concept of ‘liberté sous conditions’, or freedom within constraints, developed by Emmanuel Mounier (1946). He argued that the human person has freedom to define themselves, but within the material conditions of the world in which they live. Their task is to humanise, or personalise, that world.
Ironically, perhaps, the three movements which shared so many similarities were also riven by quarrels and rivalries which prevented them from making common cause in practice. The social and political constraints within which they worked quickly overcame the commonalities, especially in the divisive conditions of the Cold War. The development of their conflicts and ambiguities is well illustrated in the case of Emmanuel Mounier and the review, Esprit, to which I now turn.
Esprit: 1932–1940
Esprit was a literary and philosophical monthly review, founded in 1932 in the depths of the economic collapse that spread to Europe and the rest of the world after the Wall Street Crash of 1929. It was supported by a number of influential Catholic intellectuals, among whom Jacques Maritain was the most prominent, and by leaders of the small but growing movement of Christian democracy. What they had in common was a reaction against the traditional ultra-conservative groups that had dominated Catholic public opinion for most of the Third Republic. The young philosopher, Emmanuel Mounier (1905–1950), quickly emerged as the Director of the journal and led it to a position of influence during the turbulent period of the 1930s (Kelly, 1979). Broadly speaking, it was the journal of left-leaning Catholics, but was open to Protestants, Jews and even agnostics. It developed a common intellectual approach, which became a philosophy of ‘personalism’. It called for a moral revolution in the spirit of Charles Péguy, aiming for a ‘révolution personnaliste et communautaire’ which would lead to conditions that support the human person and nurture the communities in which they might flourish (Mounier, 1961). It declared itself opposed to the ‘established disorder’ (‘contre le désordre établi’) and professed a ‘tragic optimism’ about the prospects of achieving progress towards its aims.
Though based in Paris, the review had a strong base in the French provinces, and in the colonies. It had a significant network of correspondents across France, in Belgium and Switzerland and in North Africa, mostly based in the education system and the professions. It soon came into conflict with the prominent Right-wing movements led by Action française, and narrowly escaped being censured by the Pope, which would have led to its closure. It pursued a carefully balanced political path in the Centre Left and declared itself in support of the Popular Front at home and against General Franco in the Spanish Civil War. It was one of the few reviews to declare its opposition to the Munich Agreement, which it viewed as a betrayal. After the outbreak of war in September 1939, it continued publishing, though Mounier himself was mobilised in the army.
To a significant degree, Esprit was adept at managing ambiguities. It was firmly rooted in France's Catholic heartlands while pursuing a socially progressive agenda and opening itself to a wider non-Catholic audience. It was conscious of the need to be sufficiently orthodox not to incur disavowal from the Catholic Church, whether in the form of French bishops or, much more serious, the papacy, which was highly attuned to developments in France. As a result, the review's positions on key issues are notoriously difficult to pin down. They were always hedged about with reservations and often let their stance be understood by implication rather by direct declaration. Especially in relationships with the Church, the review often took care to couch its positions in complex terms that were at least compatible with, and often informed by, Catholic pastoral theology. Mounier had studied with the Catholic Bergsonist Jacques Chevalier and was mentored by the neo-Thomist Jacques Maritain and was well versed in theological niceties. As a result, his thought was typically complex and could not easily be reduced to the unambiguous endorsement of a particular political position. This is perhaps the basis for Mounier and Esprit being grouped among the ‘non-conformists’ of the period, along with a variety of thinkers across the political spectrum (Loubet del Bayle, 1969).
With the Fall of France in the spring of 1940, the management of ambiguity was about to become much more difficult. The country was governed in part by the German occupying forces and in part by the Vichy Regime of Marshal Pétain, with its fierce opposition to the defeated Republic and its espousal of traditional Catholic values, summarised as ‘Travail, Famille, Patrie’. After a short period in a prisoner-of-war camp, Mounier moved to his hometown of Grenoble, in the non-occupied zone and gravitated towards Lyon, which was becoming the de facto, though not de jure, capital of the zone (Amoretti, 1974). After extended discussions with supporters of the review, Mounier decided to seek permission to publish his review. This was not the unanimous view of his circle, some of whom thought the review would be compromised by publishing and would not be allowed by the censors to carry any non-conformist messages. The prevailing view, however, was that it would be possible to exploit the ambiguities of the Vichy Regime. In practical terms, Vichy had banned the communists and prosecuted the socialists, so that the left-leaning Catholics were the most radical political current that was tolerated in the early months of the Regime. The fact that it professed a desire to undertake a National Revolution of renewal along established Catholic principles could, it was thought, open the way to more progressive ideas compatible with the personalist and communitarian revolution. The strategy became a kind of sub-version. Mounier wrote in his diary: Blondel a une bonne formule: faire de l’armement spirituel clandestin, c’est-à-dire profiter des similitudes de noms entre nos valeurs et les valeurs publiquement proclamées pour y introduire, à la faveur de cette coïncidence, le contenu désirable (Mounier, 1963: 668).
The philosopher Charles Blondel, whom he met in Lyon in August 1940, was a Christian democrat who articulated this strategy and persuaded many of his network to support it. Some of the language being used by the Regime seemed to suggest that it was workable. Vichy spokespeople drew on a familiar stock of Catholic terminology that could be turned in different directions depending on the social context and the intellectual baggage that was linked to it. Moreover, some of the figures influential in Vichy were former associates of Mounier and his circle, including ideologues Gaston Bergery and Robert Loustau (Hellman, 1973).
Consequently, Esprit reappeared in November 1940, initially showing blank passages, deleted by the Vichy censor, but eventually settling into a carefully allusive style that did not transgress official lines but left room for a great deal of interpretation. To a large extent, political issues were not addressed and the review focused on moral and practical issues. In essence, it was a game of ambiguities, as the contributors tried to disseminate progressive ideas, often in diluted or concealed form. The hope was that more critical readers would be able to read between the lines and take the intended messages rather than the ostensible ones. Conversely, readers favourable to the Regime might find confirmation of its general direction expressed in a slightly clouded form. At this distance from the context, the ambiguities have become more impenetrable, and it is often difficult to assess the precise force and impact of much of the writing. The same ambiguity arises in the later movement of ‘contrebande’ poetry, which allowed hidden meanings to be smuggled into publicly available literary works.
In parallel with directing his publication, Mounier was an active participant in several of the initiatives promoted by Vichy to win over and develop young people. They included the cultural movement, Jeune France, founded by the composer Pierre Schaeffer, to whom Mounier served as advisor. The École des cadres d'Uriage, was a leadership training school, where Mounier taught and mentored staff. He was also involved with the Compagnons de France, a kind of scout movement, and the Chantiers de la Jeunesse, a community service organisation that replaced military conscription. In each of these organisations, Mounier and a group of associates linked to Esprit worked to introduce their personalist approach in place of the tendencies favoured by Action française. The concerted effort to weigh behind a more progressive direction for the Regime raises its own questions. In particular, could it be seen as trying to make the government more effective and more acceptable to a wider population? If so, was it implicitly trying to make collaboration work? The question was only seriously examined by the revisionist historians of the 1970s.
In the event, Mounier and Esprit gradually lost the battle for the soul of Vichy. Action française prevailed, helped by the pressures of the German authorities, the changing tide of war and the emergence of more assertive Resistance movements. Esprit responded by publishing material more overtly critical of the Right-wing tendencies and even material implicitly criticising Pétain. Mounier was removed from his posts in the youth movements during the spring of 1941, and Esprit was eventually banned in August 1941. His reaction was one of relief at the resolution of the ambiguity, and he wrote to his parents: Quelle pure joie de n’être pas du côté de la lâcheté, d’être consacré par papier officiel le frère de tous les innocents qui souffrent pour leur foi dans les camps de concentration, de tous ceux qui peuvent aujourd’hui lever leur regard sans biaiser (Mounier, 1963: 713).
The slippery management of opposites was clearly a source of stress and anxiety for Mounier, and the clarity of his situation now resolved provides the joy of being clearly on one side. It is a palpable indication of the cost of ambiguity. But the prize of ambiguity was also something to celebrate, since Esprit and its Director had fulfilled an important mission: to retain the loyalty of a substantial readership, and to attract a new generation of supporters, who would be important for the future.
The end of one ambiguity led potentially to another. While Mounier was now persona non grata with Vichy, he was by contrast thrust into the ambit of the Resistance movements, who if anything were more complex. They were slower to emerge in the non-occupied zone and the early stages were mainly broad-based discussion groups. Mounier had organised such discussions in Lyon during late 1940, and in late 1941 he set up a study group, with the blessing of the nascent Combat movement, and produced a draft ‘Déclaration des droits de la personne’ as a constitutional document for a future post-war government. He was arrested in January 1942 on suspicion of membership of Combat. He spent most of that year in prison and undertook a hunger strike which was widely reported. He was eventually tried and acquitted for lack of evidence. He spent the rest of the war in the remote village of Dieulefit in the Drôme, participating occasionally in Resistance study groups. His relationships with a wide variety of resisters were apparently warm and personal, as the village became a refuge for writers wishing to evade attention. They ranged from the Catholic journalists Andrée Viollis and André Rousseaux, who had worked for Esprit before the war, through to the poet and novelist Louis Aragon and his wife Elsa Triolet, who were leading members of the Communist Party. A further reason for Mounier to lie low was that the Catholic Church had in large majority given its support to Marshal Pétain and encouraged the faithful to support him. Mounier's old mentor, Jacques Chevalier, briefly served as Minister for Education. The Church hierarchy looked to Pétain to lead a Catholic revival and only one of the higher clergy showed reservations (the Archbishop of Toulouse), though some of the lower clergy made conspicuous contributions to Resistance activity. So at the end of the war, the Catholic Church as a whole found itself on the side of the vaincus.
The wartime record of Esprit and its Director is complex and has invited contradictory readings. The fact of Esprit's publication in 1940–1941 involved both continuity and compromise. The review's Director and contributors negotiated censorship, surveillance and the limitations on intellectual life under Vichy and in the process sought to sustain a moral voice that could address questions of duty and responsibility in constrained circumstances. The consequences of this negotiation were ambiguous. On the one hand, Esprit preserved a space for critical reflection that would stand them in good stead in the post-war era. On the other, it inevitably made editorial choices about what to publish and what to withhold, whom to criticise and whom to protect. These left the review open to accusations of moral ambiguity and political compromise with authoritarianism when judged in the later, more forensic light of memory politics (Rousso, 1990).
Esprit: 1944–1947
Mounier emerged at the end of the war with the reputation of a member of the Resistance and an opponent of the discredited Vichy Regime. He was awarded medals for his work. This reputation has largely remained intact, though some more recent historians have taken a more critical view of the ambiguities of the period (Rousso, 1990). At all events, a Resistance aura proved a vital asset for post-war public advocacy. Perhaps more importantly, Mounier was identified as a leading Catholic intellectual at a time when the Church was widely discredited for its wartime record. Mounier was one of a small group of Catholic resisters who were looked to by the Church to be spokespeople for its values at a time when the Church hierarchy was constrained to a more discreet role. The combination of a Catholic identity with a Resistance record proved a powerful basis for the post-war intellectual influence that Esprit came to wield. It was one of the first reviews to reappear in December 1944 in the middle of grave shortages that dramatically affected the publishing industry. Newsprint was heavily rationed and permissions to print anything were difficult to obtain. The post-war Esprit team was strengthened by the addition of young new members, like the 22-year-old Jean-Marie Domenach, who later became its Director. It also carried the aura of its student supporter Gilbert Dru, who was one of the Resistance martyrs, executed by the Gestapo, to whom Aragon dedicated his celebrated poem, ‘La Rose et le Réséda’ (Aragon, 1946). Dru's name stood for the unity of ‘Celui qui croyait au ciel, Celui qui n’y croyait pas’ (p. 19), the close cooperation between Catholics and communists. At all events, the review quickly surpassed its pre-war circulation and became an influential voice in post-war France. As a token of this, it secured many institutional subscriptions, including a bulk order of 500 copies monthly for the French diplomatic service.
Navigating the complexities of early post-war politics was challenging as organisations formed and dissipated before the old political parties gradually reasserted themselves. Esprit initially supported the Front national movement that sprang from a communist-led resistance organisation which had broadened its membership. When this failed to become a serious political party, the review supported the tripartite coalition of communists, socialists and Christian democrats, which governed France until the middle of 1947. The values that united the coalition were explicitly humanist ones, which for a period at least were able to express a sense of national unity based on the aspirations of the three parties that looked to the Resistance. Esprit proved an opinion-leader for the Christian democratic Mouvement républicain Populaire and was widely followed by some sections of the socialist party, Section française de l’internationale ouvrière. Its relations with the PCF were more distant, but respectful, at least until the onset of the Cold War.
From Esprit's point of view, the path to unity was through dialogue, which needed to strike a careful balance between recognising shared aspirations and challenging those ideas that were incompatible with one's own deeply held beliefs. Mounier was acutely aware that the Christian community to which he belonged did not have a monopoly of good judgement: Aussi bien la prudence, l’attention spirituelle, un certain désintéressement et comme une générosité de l’esprit sont, pour le chrétien, des vertus plus sures qu’un usage intempestif de l’anathème (Mounier, 1963: 361).
His resistance to the use of anathema was exemplified by his approach to Marxism, which became the most criticised part of his legacy. He recognised that anti-communism mainly served the forces of reaction. He acknowledged the importance of communism to so many working-class activists and trades unionists. He admired its ability to inspire solidarity and commitment and he saw the strength of the Marxist analysis of social and economic factors. On the other hand, he regretted the tendency of Marxists to reduce everything to economic factors, and to disregard the moral and spiritual dimensions. Mounier's approach to existentialism was similarly nuanced. Rather than simply denounce Sartrean existentialism for its atheism, as many Catholic commentators did, he recognised the strengths and attraction of its analysis of consciousness and human freedom. He suggested, however, that most of its strengths were shared by a long tradition of Christian existentialists, stretching from Pascal and Kierkegaard to Karl Jaspers and Gabriel Marcel (Mounier, 1963: 319). Mounier's approach was well suited to the period of ‘tripartisme’, where differences could be recognised while pursuing a common goal. But as the polarisations of the Cold War slowly sharpened, the middle ground was eroded and anathemas ultimately held sway.
The combination of unity and ambiguity was a constant tension during the early post-war period. For almost three years, the main political parties were able to overcome bitter historical and philosophical differences in a shared determination to rebuild France after the catastrophe of the war. But from the spring of 1947 a new reality emerged in which intellectuals were obliged to take sides. Increasingly, they became agents of polarisation, challenging each other to declare which side they were on, and ‘‘unmasking’ those they suspected of ambiguity. The middle ground in which Esprit had flourished was gradually replaced by a no man's land, which the hostile forces assumed was occupied by the enemy.
Unity and ambiguity
In many ways, Esprit was a paradigmatic case of the relation between unity and ambiguity. The paradox that was woven through France in the 1940s was that the two concepts were inseparable. Unity was a political and psychological necessity after cataclysm, yet the processes that produce unity involved forgetting some events, eliding others and accepting mythical narratives. Ambiguity, in turn, was both a symptom of unresolved trauma and a determined refusal to reduce complexity to neatness. The interplay between unity and ambiguity is evident in cultural memory, in the practice of judgement and in the representation of events.
In cultural memory, the post-war period required stories that could re-assemble a broken nation. These narratives often simplified heterogeneity, for example, by presenting resistance as prevalent and collaboration as marginal, because a cohesive story served political stabilisation at a difficult time in national history. But intellectuals who insisted on ambiguity disrupted these narratives by refusing to naturalise one version of the past. The effect was to complicate the national memorial landscape: official commemorations sought unity; critical cultural work preserved ambiguity.
In the practice of judgement, the post-war trials and purges pursued retributive justice and symbolic purification. Yet decisions about culpability were rarely straightforward. Many actors occupied morally ambivalent positions. Often, complicity was shaded by coercion, blurred by the need to survive, or complicated by family loyalties. The requirement for clear categories, such as collaborator or resistor, guilty or innocent, clashed with a social reality in which choices were constrained and information was partial. Some intellectuals pushed for legal clarity and moral sanction while others urged nuanced, contextualised readings. The latter position prioritised ambiguity.
In the representation of events, the art and literature of the 1940s often reflected the tension between the desire for moral clarity and an aesthetic that tolerates uncertainty. Novels, plays and essays from the period adopted different strategies for responding to trauma. Those that prioritised unity offered closure and ethical certainty while those that prioritised ambiguity staged ethical puzzles and ambivalent protagonists whose lives resisted categorical judgement. Both strategies served important social functions: the one consoling, the other diagnostic.
As a result, unity and ambiguity go hand in hand and neither is invariably preferable. There are certainly circumstances in which moral clarity is necessary, for example when legal rights are at stake, or when systematic injustice must be remedied. Yet the uncompromising demand for closure can also produce injustices, silencing complexities that matter for historical truth and for a truthful public culture. The intellectual task in the 1940s was to hold these tensions in view: to recognise that unity can be necessary and yet liable to erase complexity or diversity, and that ambiguity can be truthful but also inimical to social cohesion. Esprit's trajectory illustrates this dialectic. The review's personalist ambition was to forge a morally renewed unity, but its methods, including balanced editorial choices and careful style and vocabulary, created residues of ambiguity. These residues derived no doubt from the moral pluralism and material constraints of the period, suggesting that ambiguity was often the socio-cultural price of provisional unity. The review recognised too that the refusal to acknowledge ambiguity could risk producing brittle unities that collapse under the weight of suppressed truths.
Conclusion
The cultural and intellectual experience of France in the 1940s suggests lessons about the limits of retrospective moralism and the ethical demands of reconstruction. The decade's dominant movements, including Marxism, existentialism and Catholic personalism, each offered ways of rethinking national unity. Each, in its turn, exemplified the paradox that Margaret Atack identified: novels and cultural practices oriented towards unity were often followed by texts and debates that revealed the ambiguities such unity occluded. Esprit and Emmanuel Mounier offer a case study of how their yearning for a moral unity that could hold France together also made them agents, and witnesses, of ambiguity. It suggests that ambiguity is not merely a symptom of moral failure or a cover for complicity; it is a historically produced condition with moral and practical significance.
The reconstruction of France after the war was as much cultural and intellectual as it was political and social. The restoration of national unity after the catastrophe raised the stakes of memory and gave weighty incentives to produce coherent narratives. Yet the post-war intellectual culture that I have evoked largely refused the allure of narratives that might dissipate the complexities and particularities of social life. That refusal was sometimes experienced as ambiguity; but it may also have been the pre-condition of a more resilient national culture – one that recognised the provisionality of unity and the ongoing necessity of critical reflection. National unity in post-war France was provisional, and ambiguity was its necessary companion. The one was the price of the other and the bargain proved to be worth paying as each contributed to the shaping of a resilient country for the turbulent years that followed.
