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"This book investigates the radical transformation of the relationship between Germany and France, neighbors whose border constituted one of the deepest fault lines of European history. For generations, the French and the Germans believed they were "eternal enemies," and this myth of primordial hatred was the lens through which they interpreted each other's every move. Yet today, a Franco-German war is unimaginable. Passman locates the reshaping of the French-German dynamic in the civic organizations that made the very notion of cooperation credible. After World War I, and in the decades to follow, Franco-German associations kept calling for an end to their animus. Through journals, cultural exchanges, events, and charitable ventures, activists opened upthe possibility of imagining friendship with the enemy. The pursuit of French-German cooperation did not begin with politicians after World War II. It took flight in the 1920s and persisted through decades of turmoil. In anchoring the history of collaboration in a longer arc of French-German cooperation, Passman illuminates how entangled were the histories of 1920s rapprochement, Nazi-Era collaborationism, and postwar reconciliation. This volume will appeal to scholars, students, and general readers interested in the histories of modern France and modern Germany, European integration, and Peace Studies"--

This book investigates the radical transformation of the relationship between Germany and France, neighbors whose border constituted one of the deepest fault lines of European history.

For generations, the French and the Germans believed they were “eternal enemies,” and this myth of primordial hatred was the lens through which they interpreted each other’s every move.  Yet today, a Franco-German war is unimaginable. Passman locates the reshaping of the French-German dynamic in the civic organizations that made the very notion of cooperation credible. After World War I, and in the decades to follow, Franco-German associations kept calling for an end to their animus. Through journals, cultural exchanges, events, and charitable ventures, activists opened up the possibility of imagining friendship with the enemy. The pursuit of French-German cooperation did not begin with politicians after World War II. It took flight in the 1920s and persisted through decades of turmoil. In anchoring the history of collaboration in a longer arc of French-German cooperation, Passman illuminates how entangled were the histories of 1920s rapprochement, Nazi-era collaborationism, and postwar reconciliation.

This volume will appeal to scholars, students, and general readers interested in the histories of modern France and modern Germany, European integration, and peace studies.



This book investigates the radical transformation of the relationship between Germany and France, neighbors whose border constituted one of the deepest fault lines of European history.

Introduction: Enemies, Collaborators, Friends Part 1: Demobilization of
the Mind and Spirit, 19251933 Introduction to Part One: Demobilization of
the Mind and Spirit, 19251933
1. Leaving the Self
2. In Search of
Understanding
3. Practicing Rapprochement Part 2: From Rapprochement to
Collaboration, 19331944 Introduction to Part Two: From Rapprochement to
Collaboration, 19331944
4. The Elasticity of Cooperation
5. Collaboration
Part 3: The Revival of Cooperation, 19451954 Introduction to Part Three: The
Revival of Cooperation, 19451954
6. The Quest for Reconciliation
7.
Reclaiming Cooperation. Conclusion: The Cultivation of Friendship, 19251963
Elana Passman is Professor of History at Earlham College in Richmond, Indiana.