Berghahn Journals
Register

Accommodating Vichy: The Politics of Marcel Pagnol's La Fille du puisatier

Author: Bowles, Brett

Source: Historical Reflections, Volume 35, Number 2, Summer 2009 , pp. 84-107(24)

Abstract:

From late 1940 through mid-1942 Marcel Pagnol accommodated to varying degrees the demands of the Vichy regime and the German occupiers in order to ensure the survival of his film production business. In so doing, he placed himself in the ambiguous grey zone of thought and action that stretched between the poles of proactive collaboration and proactive resistance. Pagnol's wartime activities, especially the history of his film La Fille du puisatier (The Well-Digger's Daughter, 1940), offer insight into how material interest, ideology, and necessity shaped French industrialists' reactions to the Occupation. Pagnol's itinerary also reveals the compromise and conflict that often lay below the surface of Franco-German politics, while highlighting the importance that both regimes attached to cinema as a tool of economics, cultural policy, and propaganda.

The requested document is freely available to subscribers. Users without a subscription can purchase this article.

Sign in



 

 

Article Access Options

The full text electronic article is available for purchase. You will be able to download the full text electronic article after payment.

$32.95 plus tax      Refund Policy

 

OR

Back to top