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Denaturalized Claire Zalc

Denaturalized By Claire Zalc

Denaturalized by Claire Zalc


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Summary

The number of French Jews killed during the Holocaust has been massively underestimated. Claire Zalc explains why: the Vichy regime terminated the legal standing of thousands of naturalized Jewish citizens, erasing them from the record. Their official disappearance is a lesson about the precariousness of naturalized status, then and now.

Denaturalized Summary

Denaturalized: How Thousands Lost Their Citizenship and Lives in Vichy France by Claire Zalc

In Denaturalized, Claire Zalc combines the precision of the scholar with the passion of a storytellerThis is a deftly written book. Zalc combines in an accessible style (smoothly translated by Catherine Porter) the stories of people trapped within a bureaucracy that was as obsessed, perhaps, with clearing files as with hunting Jews. In other words, Zalc reminds us how cruel the banality of indifference could be.Wall Street Journal

Winner of the Prix dhistoire de la justice

A leading historian radically revises our understanding of the fate of Jews under the Vichy regime.

Thousands of naturalized French men and women had their citizenship revoked by the Vichy government during the Second World War. Once denaturalized, these men and women, mostly Jews who were later sent to concentration camps, ceased being French on official records and walked off the pages of history. As a result, we have for decades severely underestimated the number of French Jews murdered by Nazis during the Holocaust. In Denaturalized, Claire Zalc unearths this tragic record and rewrites World War II history.

At its core, this is a detective story. How do we trace a citizen made alien by the law? How do we solve a murder when the body has vanished? Faced with the absence of straightforward evidence, Zalc turned to the original naturalization papers in order to uncover how denaturalization later occurred. She discovered that, in many cases, the very officials who granted citizenship to foreigners before 1940 were the ones who retracted it under Vichy rule.

The idea of citizenship has always existed alongside the threat of its revocation, and this is especially true for those who are naturalized citizens of a modern state. At a time when the status of millions of naturalized citizens in the United States and around the world is under greater scrutiny, Denaturalized turns our attention to the precariousness of the naturalized experiencethe darkness that can befall those who suddenly find themselves legally cast out.

Denaturalized Reviews

In Denaturalized, Claire Zalc combines the precision of the scholar with the passion of a storytellerThis is a deftly written book. Zalc combines in an accessible style (smoothly translated by Catherine Porter) the stories of people trapped within a bureaucracy that was as obsessed, perhaps, with clearing files as with hunting Jews. In other words, Zalc reminds us how cruel the banality of indifference could be. * Wall Street Journal *
Claire Zalcs book is an important and original contribution to the history of Occupied France. It examines one of the key organisms of xenophobic persecution and discrimination set up by Frances collaborating Vichy regime: the Commission for the Review of Naturalizations. Since the archives of that body have disappeared her work is a brilliant piece of historical detective work which situates the work of the Commission within the wider anti-Semitic policies of the Vichy regime. Her book not only analyzes the workings of an institution but recovers the stories of individuals whose lives were destroyed by it. -- Julian Jackson, author of De Gaulle
Some 15,000 newly naturalized people were stripped of their French citizenship by the Vichy administration during the Nazi occupation of France; many of the Jews among them were then deported to their deaths. Here, Claire Zalc ingeniously unravels the mechanism of denaturalization and gives us vivid portraits of both perpetrators and victims. -- Robert O. Paxton, author of The Anatomy of Fascism
During World War II the experience of denaturalization was akin to a death sentence for many Jews. Some were already at Auschwitz when their citizenship was revoked. For others this change in legal status sealed their fate. Zalcs eye-opening book invites us to consider the true nature and fragility of national identity. At a time when a global crisis is forcing many of us to return to our country of origin, this is a book of great civic and political relevance. -- Annette Wieviorka, author of The Era of the Witness
Zalc delivers an insightful and distressing look at efforts to revoke citizenship in Nazi-occupied FranceThis is an enlightening portrait of how the tools of bureaucracy can be bent to evil ends. * Publishers Weekly *
Her detailed investigation provides unique insights into how bureaucracies in authoritarian regimes produce and reproduce violenceDrawing on the Vichy governments archives, Zalc follows the life stories of some of those who were naturalized as French during the interwar years, only to be stripped of their citizenship and deported under wartime Frances collaborationist regimeZalcs work provides direct evidence of how state powerand sometimes state violencefunctions through the routine processes of registration, categorization, and counting. -- Laura van Waas and Natalie Brinham * Project Syndicate *
An immensely successful volume, Denaturalized will make an important addition to the reading lists of scholars of modern France and the Holocaust, as well as those interested in the methods of studying democracies and citizenship, police surveillance, and the relationship between immigrants and the state. -- Robin Buller * H-Net Reviews *
Denaturalized is a landmark study of the internal workings of the Vichy state and an important contribution to the literature on France and the HolocaustDeserves a wide readership. -- Herrick Chapman * Journal of Modern History *

About Claire Zalc

Claire Zalc, a prizewinning historian, is Professor at the Ecole des hautes etudes en sciences sociales, Research Director at the Centre national de la recherche scientifique, and Director of the Institute of Modern and Contemporary History at the Ecole normale superieure.

Additional information

GOR013620482
9780674988422
0674988426
Denaturalized: How Thousands Lost Their Citizenship and Lives in Vichy France by Claire Zalc
Used - Very Good
Hardback
Harvard University Press
2020-10-13
408
Short-listed for FAF Translation Prize 2021 (United States)
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - Denaturalized