The Commune And Its ForeignersIssue coordinated by Sylvie Aprile, Quentin Dupuis, Jacques RougerieFrom its origins and after the defeat, to justify incarceration and expulsion, Versaillais have strongly underlined the presence of foreigners among communards. It then has become a major element of their long standing stigmatization and exclusion in post Commune France. In addition, academics have also stressed the major role played by these men and women from Poland, Italy, Hungary, Belgium or Luxembourg who fought to death in the streets of Paris during the Bloody Week. 126 pages Order |
Find here the interviews from the radio Alternative FM (Katia Scifo) on the Commune :
Musiques de Serge Utgé-Royo, Productions Alleluia
Music by Serge Utgé-Royo, an Alleluia Production
Interview with Sylvie APRILE, Université Charles-de-Gaulle (Lille 3)
Interview with Jena-Louis ROBERT, université Panthéon-Sorbonne (Paris 1)
STRANGE COMMUNE
: : Being a foreigner in France at the end of the Second Empire
Lautrent Dornel
: : Being foreigner under the Commune : Hangovers from the XIXth century nationalist dreams
Quentin Deluermoz
: : The Versaillais and the Foreigners
Robert Tombs
: : Rebond for the Commune
Autour du film de Watkins
FOREIGNERS DURING THE COMMUNE
: : Foreign Communards in le Maitron
Jean-Louis Robert
: : German immigrants in Paris 1970/71 : between expulsion, naturalisation and the fight on the barricades
Mareike König
: : Luxembourg communards
Henri Wehenkel
: : The Polish and the Commune : 140 years after
Jerzy W. Borejszsa
THE COMMUNE FROM ABROAD
: : Marcel G Deschamps : revolutionnary without borders. Going back to transatlantic political migrations from the 2nd Republic to the Commune
Michel Cordillot
: : The English and mass tourism in Paris
Éric Fournier
: : Exile genetics of communards in Brussels
Quentin Dupuis
: : NGO « Les Garibaldiens » What’s the Commune for you ?
Philippe Guistinatti