Europe-Action

Europe-Action was a far-right white nationalist and euro-nationalist magazine and movement, founded by Dominique Venner in 1963 and active until 1966. Distancing itself from pre-WWII fascist ideas such as anti-intellectualism, anti-parliamentarianism and traditional French nationalism, Europe-Action promoted a pan-European nationalism based on the "Occident"—or the "white peoples"— and a social Darwinism escorted by racialism, labeled "biological realism". These theories, along with the meta-political strategy of Venner, influenced young Europe-Action journalist Alain de Benoist and are deemed conducive to the creation of GRECE and the Nouvelle Droite in 1968.[1]

Europe-Action
TypeMonthly magazine
PublisherSociété de Presse et d'Édition Saint-Just
FoundedJanuary 1963
Political alignmentWhite nationalism
Pan-European nationalism
LanguageFrench
Ceased publicationNovember 1966
CountryFrance
Circulation7,500–10,000

History

Background: 1958–1962

In his 1962 manifesto titled Pour une critique positive ("For a positive critique") that he wrote while in prison, former Jeune Nation member Dominique Venner abandoned the myth of the coup de force, convinced that a political revolution would not be able to happen before a cultural one. The latter could be achieved via the public promotion of nationalist ideas until they achieve popular support.[2] For Venner, intellectual persuasion and violence both had their place; but his movement had to favor ideas over action.[3] He also aimed at removing "old ideas" from pre-WWII nationalism and fascism, such as anti-parliamentarianism, anti-intellectualism, or a form of patriotism reduced to the boundaries of the nation-state.[4] The text was deemed influential in nationalist circles, François Duprat describing For a positive critique as their equivalent of What is to be Done?, a political pamphlet written by Lenin 16 years before the Bolshevik Revolution.[5] They held an ambiguous view of Nazism, Europe-Action stating via Maurice Bardèche that "next to genial intuitions, Hitler made mistakes", which "are largely due to a lack of established doctrinal foundations".[4][6]

They were also influenced by the "Manifesto of the Class of '60", published three years before the founding of Europe-Action, in which the pro-colonial founders of the Federation of Nationalist Students (FEN) committed themselves to "action of profound consequence", as opposed to the "sterile activism" of street violence alone previously promoted by Jeune Nation in the 1950s.[7] While still deeply committed to the cause of French Algeria, the members of Europe-Action chose to take into account the new world emerging from decolonization and the consolidation of the French Fifth Republic. They consequently tried to theorize a radical right ideology based on materials other than Vichy nostalgia and Catholic traditionalism.[3]

Political activism: 1963–1966

Europe-Action was launched in January 1963 by Dominique Venner as a nationalist movement escorted by a magazine of the same name,[8] in which Alain de Benoist and François d'Orcival soon became journalists.[9][10] Jacques Ploncard d'Assac initially wrote for the magazine but soon denounced his anti-Christian stance and left in August 1963.[11] The editing company of the magazine, Société de Presse et d'Édition Saint-Just, was founded in November 1962 by Venner, Suzanne Gingembre, the spouse of former OAS treasurer Maurice Gingembre, and Jacques de Larocque-Latour, a racist caricaturist. Pierre Bousquet, a former Waffen-SS, later joined the company.[12]

In 1964, De Benoist became the editor-in-chief of the weekly publication Europe-Action hebdomadaire.[13] Along with the Federation of Nationalist Students, Europe-Action supported the far-right candidacy of Jean-Louis Tixier-Vignancour in the 1965 presidential election through the "T.V. Committees".[9] After a dispute between the leader of Occident, Pierre Sidos, and the campaign director Jean-Marie Le Pen, Europe-Action volunteers replaced Occident as a support group in the Comité Jeunes ("Youth Committee") of Tixier-Vignancour.[14] Venner's movement used its militant base to organize demonstrations against Algerian immigration.[15]

From June 1965 to 1966, Jean Mabire was redactor-in-chief of Europe-Action.[16][17] After the electoral demise of Tixier-Vignancour, head members of Europe-Action founded in 1966 the European Rally for Liberty (REL), along with by young nationalists from the Federation of Nationalist Students.[2] Europe-Action hebdomadaire became the organ for the European Rally for Liberty during the campaign,[9] and was replaced by a short-lived magazine named L'Observateur Européen.[18] The REL was only able to run 27 candidates during the 1967 legislative election and failed at 2.58% of the votes.[2][19] This electoral debacle is cited as conducive to the foundation of the ethno-nationalist think tank GRECE and the development of Nouvelle Droite meta-politics.[2]

The magazine released its last issue in November 1966 following the bankruptcy of its publishing house.[15][20] Europe-Action ended definitively in the summer 1967 after a failed attempt to relaunch the publication.[15] It had an estimated circulation of 7,500 to 10,000.[21] The symbol of Europe-Action was a hoplite helmet.[22]

Views

The movement developed two main thesis: a "biological realism" composed of racialism and social Darwinism; and a pan-European nationalism built on a common Western civilization seen as the link between the peoples of the "white race".[20] Those ideas were to be promoted through a meta-political strategy until the achievement of cultural dominance.[23]

Biological realism

"Biological realism", a concept coined by French neo-fascist activist René Binet in 1950, promoted the establishment of individual and racial inequalities upon pseudo-scientific observations.[20] Binet argued that "interbreeding capitalism" ("capitalisme métisseur") aimed at creating a "uniform inhumanity" ("barbarie uniforme"); and that only "a true socialism" could "achieve race liberation" through the "absolute segregation at both global and national level."[24] Europe-Action also drew influence from the so-called "message of Uppsala",[20] a text likely wrote in 1958 by French neo-fascists related to the New European Order, and deemed influential on European far-right movements that followed as it carried out subtle semantic shifts between "differentialism" and "inequality".[25] The ideas of Binet and "Uppsala", characterized by a worldwide "biological-cultural deal" where each group would remain sovereign in its own region, foreshadowed both the racialism of Europe-Action and the ethno-pluralism of GRECE.[20][26]

Following the Algerian independence in 1962, Europe-Action was among the first to oppose Algerian immigration (labeled "invasion").[20] The group defended a racial rather than geographical nationalism, proclaiming race to be "the new homeland, the homeland of the flesh which should be defended with an animal-like ferocity."[27] Opposed to ethnic mix, they called for remigration,[28] arguing that "race mixing [was] nothing more than a slow genocide".[29] Calling for an end to development aid towards former colonies, they feared a future France "occupied by twenty million Maghrebi Arabs and twenty million Negro-Africans".[30][31]

In France, the significant immigration of colored elements is a grave issue […]. We also know the size of the North African population [...]. What is serious for the future: we know that the basis of European settlement, which allowed for civilizing expansion, was that of a white ethnic group. The destruction of this balance, which can be quick, will lead to our disappearance and that of our civilization.

Dominique Venner, Europe-Action, nº 38, février 1966, p. 8.

Europe-Action promoted the project of creating a genetically improved social elite along with, "without futile sentimentality", the elimination of "biological waste",[32] "not through massacres but through eugenic processes".[31] They proposed to "eliminate biological foam" by "returning the mediocre elements of this class to their ranks and retain the valid elite" only, in order "not to allow the biological growth of waste".[33]

Euro-nationalism

Their conception of Europe was not limited to the continent, and described as a "heart whose blood beats in Johannesburg and in Quebec City, in Sydney and Budapest, aboard white caravels and spaceships, on every sea and in every desert in the world."[2][34] Europe-Action issue of June 1964 indeed grouped the US, France and South Africa together, as mere "provinces of this large motherland that is the white race."[35]

The "Dictionary of the militant", published in Europe-Action in May 1963, defined the Occident as the "community of the white peoples", the people itself being defined as a "biological unity confirmed by history".[36] The following definition of nationalism is thus given: "doctrine that expresses in political terms the philosophy and the vital necessities of the white people".[37] According to political scientist Stéphane François, this world view was influenced by the Völkisch idea of an organic entity gathering those of the same blood, the same culture and same destiny.[20]

Rejecting both the Europe of the nation-states advocated by the Gaullists and the United States of Europe endorsed by the Christian democrats, Europe-Action supported a racialist Europe based on its ethnic groups. This project would have united white peoples of Europe in a powerful imperial entity, completed by an alliance with white-minority-ruled states like Rhodesia or South Africa.[20]

Meta-politics

Initially conceived as a think thank founded on a magazine, Europe-Action gradually evolved towards a political movement.[31] Seeking to oppose the anti-intellectualism that had been a major hindrance to the right in the battle of ideas—notably against the Marxist set of concepts—Venner aimed at establishing a new radical right doctrine to be spread in wider society and bring about a nationalist cultural revolution.[2][38] He progressively accepted the democratic institutions and the emergence of a post-fascist society, arguing that Europe-Action had to show the bureaucracy they were capable of running a state to win their support. Describing Europe-Action members as "militants of a white nation", Venner concluded that nationalists should infiltrate organizations, "however small, including unions, local newspapers, even youth hostels" in order to disseminate their ideas.[5][39]

Legacy

Political scientist Stéphane François describes Europe-Action as "the main structure in France that bridged WWII activists and the young post-war generations".[20] Jean-Yves Camus further adds that the "transition from French nationalism to the promotion of European identity, theorized by Europe-Action in the mid-1960s, disrupted the references of the French far-right by producing a gap that has not been repaired to date, separating integral sovereignists, for whom no level of sovereignty is legitimate except the Nation-State [...] from the identitarians, for whom the Nation-State is an intermediate framework between being rooted in a region (in the sense of the German "Heimat") and belonging to the civilized framework of Europe."[40]

Europe-action theories indeed formed the ideological foundations of the think tank GRECE in 1968, and the magazine-movement has been described as the "embryonic form" of the Nouvelle Droite.[2][41] The latter however distanced themselves from Europe-Action's anti-communism and pro-colonial stance, in order to develop a critic a liberal capitalism and adopt a Third-Worldist point of view.[23] Many founding members of the ethno-nationalist think tank were indeed formerly involved in the magazine.[42] GRECE and the Nouvelle Droite inherited a number of themes from Europe-Action, among them "the anti-Christian stance, a marked elitism, the racial notion of a united Europe, the seeds of a change from biological to cultural definitions of "difference", and the sophisticated inversion of terms like racism and anti-racism".[1] Another group led by Pierre Bousquet, Jean Castrillo, and Pierre Pauty established the magazine Militant in 1967. They were later among the founders of the Front National in 1972, and at the origin of the French Nationalist Party in 1983.[43]

Notable members

See also

References

Citations

  1. Bar-On, Tamir (2001). "The Ambiguities of the Nouvelle Droite, 1968-1999". The European Legacy. 6 (3): 339. doi:10.1080/10848770120051349. ISSN 1084-8770.
  2. Taguieff 1994, pp. 4–6.
  3. Shields 2007, p. 119.
  4. Milza 1987, pp. 132, 339.
  5. Fysh & Wolfreys 2003, pp. 105–106.
  6. Nazism: "A German popular movement that was called to power in 1933 under the leadership of its leader Adolf Hitler. In five years of peace, he deployed tremendous energy and transformed Germany into an innovative country in social, legal and economic terms (...). He achieved German unity and mobilized the people in a powerful lyrical exaltation. National Socialism has been described as a youth dictatorship. Alongside brilliant intuitions, their mistakes resulted in their loss: hypertrophy of the notion of the leader; romantic (non-scientific) racism only intended to reinforce a narrow, vengeful, aggressive nationalism; reactionary European politics that not only led to their defeat, but also to the general hostility of the European peoples. These errors are largely due to a lack of established doctrinal foundations" (Maurice Bardèche. "National-socialisme". In "Dictionnaire du militant", Europe-Action n°5, May 1963, p. 65)
  7. Shields 2007, pp. 119–120.
  8. "Europe-Action. France". data.bnf.fr. Retrieved 8 August 2019.
  9. Taguieff, Tarnero & Badinter 1983, pp. 32–33.
  10. Lebourg, Nicolas (2011). "La diffusion des péjorations communautaires après 1945: Les nouvelles altérophobies". Revue d'éthique et de théologie morale (in French). 267 (4): 35. doi:10.3917/retm.267.0035. ISSN 1266-0078.
  11. Europe-Action, n. 8, Aug 1963 — "French nationalists, even agnostics like Maurras, have always recognized the Christian character of the French ethnic group. There is therefore an incompatibility between atheistic materialism and the very object of French nationalism."
  12. Algazy 1984, p. 266.
  13. Simmons, Harvey G. (5 March 2018). The French National Front: The Extremist Challenge To Democracy. Routledge. ISBN 9780429976179.
  14. Shields 2007, pp. 126–128.
  15. Shields 2007, p. 123.
  16. Picco, Pauline (28 June 2018). Liaisons dangereuses: Les extrêmes droites en France et en Italie (1960-1984) (in French). Presses universitaires de Rennes. p. 91. ISBN 9782753555761.
  17. Hamelin, Bertrand; Marpeau, Benoît (2009). "Intellectuel normand ou intellectuel en Normandie ? Michel de Boüard et Jean Mabire, itinéraires croisés". Annales de Normandie. 35 (1): 288–90. doi:10.3406/annor.2009.2544.
  18. Rioux, Jean-Pierre; Sirinelli, Jean-François (1991). La Guerre d'Algérie et les intellectuels français (in French). Editions Complexe. p. 65. ISBN 9782870273777.
  19. D'Appollonia 1998, p. 311.
  20. François, Stéphane (23 May 2013). "Dominique Venner et le renouvellement du racisme". Fragments sur les Temps Présents (in French). Retrieved 12 August 2019.
  21. Algazy 1984, p. 283.
  22. Camus & Lebourg 2017, p. 142.
  23. Crépon, Sylvain (2015). Les faux-semblants du Front national: Sociologie d'un parti politique (in French). Presses de Sciences Po. p. 53. ISBN 9782724618129.
  24. René Binet, Théorie du Racisme, s.e., Paris, 1950, pp. 16-35
  25. Taguieff, Pierre-André (1985). "Le néo-racisme différentialiste. Sur l'ambiguïté d'une évidence commune et ses effets pervers". Langage & société. 34 (1): 69–98. doi:10.3406/lsoc.1985.2039.
  26. Taguieff, Pierre-André (1981). "L'Héritage nazi. Des Nouvelles Droites européennes à la littérature niant le génocide". Les Nouveaux Cahiers (64).
  27. D'Appollonia 1998, pp. 309–310.
  28. François, Stéphane (23 May 2013). "Dominique Venner et le renouvellement du racisme". Fragments sur les Temps Présents (in French). Retrieved 16 August 2019. De ce fait, la revue Europe Action était l’une des premières à critiquer l’immigration (l’« invasion ») algérienne [...] et à inciter au rapatriement massif des étrangers, par hantise du métissage.
  29. Gilles Fournier, "La guerre de demain est déjà déclenchée", Europe-Action, nº 16, April 1964, p. 21
  30. Algazy 1984, pp. 271–274.
  31. Shields 2007, pp. 122–123.
  32. Europe-Action, Jul-Aug 1964, p. 20
  33. Europe-Action, Jul-Aug 1964, p. 20.
  34. Europe-Action, Jul-Aug 1964, p. 3.
  35. Taguieff, Pierre-André. "La Nouvelle droite à l’œil nu" (1), Droit et liberté, December 1979.
  36. "Dictionnaire du militant", Europe-Action, n° 5, May 1963, pp. 73-74
  37. "Dictionnaire du militant", Europe-Action, n° 5, May 1963, p. 26
  38. Shields 2007, pp. 119–121.
  39. Europe-Action, May 1963, pp. 50–1
  40. Camus, Jean-Yves (1 May 2018). "Le mouvement identitaire ou la construction d'un mythe des origines européennes". Fondation Jean-Jaurès (in French). Retrieved 16 August 2019. It was the transition from French nationalism to the promotion of European identity, theorised by Europe-Action in the mid-1960s, that upset the references of the French far-right by producing a gap that has not been repaired to date. This fracture separates integral sovereignists, for whom no level of sovereignty is legitimate except the Nation-State [...] from the identitarians, for whom the Nation-State is an intermediate framework between being rooted in a region (in the sense of the German "Heimat") and belonging to the framework of European civilization.
  41. McCulloch, Tom (2006). "The Nouvelle Droite in the 1980s and 1990s: Ideology and Entryism, the Relationship with the Front National". French Politics. 4 (2): 160. doi:10.1057/palgrave.fp.8200099. ISSN 1476-3427.
  42. Shields 2007, p. 145.
  43. Lebourg, Nicolas. "Neo-fascisme et nationalisme-révolutionnaire. 2. Etat-Nation-Europe". phdn.org. Retrieved 31 August 2019.
  44. Simmons, Harvey G. (5 March 2018). The French National Front: The Extremist Challenge To Democracy. Routledge. pp. 69 (note 10). ISBN 9780429976179.
  45. Camus & Lebourg 2017, p. 30.

Bibliography

  • Algazy, Joseph (1984). La tentation néo-fasciste en France: de 1944 à 1965 (in French). Fayard. ISBN 978-2213014265.
  • Camus, Jean-Yves; Lebourg, Nicolas (2017). Far-Right Politics in Europe. Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674971530.
  • D'Appollonia, Ariane Chebel (1998). L'extrême-droite en France: De Maurras à Le Pen (in French). Editions Complexe. ISBN 978-2870277645.
  • Fysh, Peter; Wolfreys, Jim (2003). The Politics of Racism in France. Springer. ISBN 978-0230288331.
  • Milza, Pierre (1987). Fascisme français. Passé et présent. Flammaration. ISBN 978-2080812360.
  • Shields, James G. (2007). The Extreme Right in France: From Pétain to Le Pen. Routledge. ISBN 978-0415372008.
  • Taguieff, Pierre-André; Tarnero, Jacques; Badinter, Robert (1983). Vous avez dit fascismes ? (in French). Arthaud-Montalba. ISBN 9782402119221.
  • Taguieff, Pierre-André (1993). "Origines et métamorphoses de la Nouvelle Droite". Vingtième Siècle. Revue d'histoire (40): 5–6. doi:10.2307/3770354. ISSN 0294-1759. JSTOR 3770354.
  • Taguieff, Pierre André (1994). Sur la Nouvelle Droite: jalons d'une analyse critique (in French). Descartes et Cie. ISBN 9782910301026.
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