Grand Disillusion: Francois Mitterrand and the French Left
By (Author) Joseph Morray
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
28th February 1997
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Biography: historical, political and military
European history
Far-left political ideologies and movements
Left-of-centre democratic ideologies
944.08
Hardback
184
This work traces the life of Francois Mitterand from his youth as an ardent Catholic and supporter of the Marshal Petain, to his career as a centrist politician of the Fourth Republic, through his capture of the leadership of the Socialist Party, leading to his election as President of France in 1981. During these years the Communist Party of France, influenced by such militants as the poet Louis Aragon, was evolving into a national party eager to participate in a joint effort with the Socialist Party to begin a rupture with capitalism through the election of Mitterand as president. The reform of the Communist Party and the rise of Mitterand led to the Union of the Left. In 1981, the Socialist Party had an absolute majority in the French parliament plus support from the Communist deputies. President Mitterand could have implemented his leftist electoral promises and given Western Europe a historical lesson in how to move toward socialism in an advanced industrial country. Instead, he chose to change his programme to the development of capitalism on a European scale. The reasons for this turn-around emerge from an examination of his life and career.
JOSEPH P. MORRAY is a retired teacher, lawyer, and writer. After completing studies at the United States Naval Academy, Harvard Law School, and the University of Paris, he began an academic career at the University of California at Berkeley. Morray gave this up to go with his family to Cuba to teach at the University of Havana and write a book on the Cuban Revolution. He also taught at the University of Chile. In his eight books, he has explored modern attempts at socialist revolutions in Latin America, Siberia, Algeria, and France.