"Colonize, Exterminate" (2005)
In this book, he claims how techniques and concepts forged during the New Imperialism period at the end of the 19th century were then used for the Holocaust. He thus underlines how both Tocqueville and Michelet openly talked of "extermination" about the colonization of Western United States and the Indian removal period. Hence, he quotes Tocqueville himself, in 1841, about the French conquest of Algeria:
"In France I have often heard people I respect, but do not approve, deplore burning harvests, emptying granaries and seizing unarmed men, women and children. As I see it, these are unfortunate necessities that any people wishing to make war on the Arabs must accept... I believe the laws of war entitle us to ravage the country and that we must do this, either by destroying crops at harvest time, or all the time by making rapid incursions, known as raids, the aim of which is to carry off men and flocks"
"Whatever the case, continued Tocqueville, we may say in a general manner that all political freedoms must be suspended in Algeria." According to LeCour Grandmaison, "De Tocqueville thought the conquest of Algeria was important for two reasons: first, his understanding of the international situation and France’s position in the world, and, second, changes in French society." Tocqueville, who despised the July monarchy (1830–1848), believed that war and colonization would "restore national pride, threatened, he believed, by "the gradual softening of social mores" in the middle classes. Their taste for "material pleasures" was spreading to the whole of society, giving it "an example of weakness and egotism"." Applauding the methods of Thomas Robert Bugeaud, Tocqueville went as far as saying that "war in Africa" had become a "science":
"war in Africa is a science. Everyone is familiar with its rules and everyone can apply those rules with almost complete certainty of success. One of the greatest services that Field Marshal Bugeaud has rendered his country is to have spread, perfected and made everyone aware of this new science".
Thus, LeCour Grandmaison claims that the techniques employed during the Algerian War (1954–62) by the French army were rooted in history.
According to LeCour Grandmaison, history of warfare is not limited to the history of technical progress of weapons, but should englobe the "juridical, administrative and conceptual arsenal" which accompanies it: "We can only understand the extreme violences of the 1848 civil war - most of the times qualified as "bloody repression" - if we replace them in a longer genealogy, by the way exterior, and brought back to what was experimented before, most notably during the Algerian war " In the same interview, LeCour Grandmaison, basing himself on texts from Zola, Victor Hugo, Lamartine, but also Darwin, André Gide, Albert Londres, Jules Verne, Maupassant, Foucault, Barthes, Joseph Conrad, etc., distinguish criticisms of the abuses of colonialism and criticisms of the principle itself of colonization. He goes as far as claiming how even Marx and Engels were not immune to this racialist ideology of the 19th century, as these authors also considered the colonization as inevitable and qualified, as did all their contemporaries, non-European people as "primitives" and "barbarians". It wasn't until the Third International that the socialist movement really opposed itself to colonialism and supported national liberation movements.
Read more about this topic: Olivier Le Cour Grandmaison
Famous quotes containing the word exterminate:
“If they [Mexicans] touch the hair of the head of one of our citizens, tell him [Commodore Dallas] to batter down and destroy their town and exterminate the inhabitants from the face of the earth!”
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