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Book review: Left Bank

Anne Garvey is fascinated by a slice of heroic history

May 1, 2018 16:26
Photo credit Hannah Starkey agnespoiriercaf-od-onleftbankaug2017lr_orig
2 min read

Left Bank: Art, Passion and the Rebirth of Paris 1940-1950  by Agnes Poirier is published by Bloomsbury (£25) 

When, at the end of five years of Nazi occupation, the Vichy French leader, Marshal Philippe Pètain came to trial, France’s Jewish former Prime Minister Lèon Blum called for the death penalty. “Treason,” he wrote, “is the act of selling out”, which so many had done. Terrified by the brutal onslaught of the German army, a high proportion of the French population had shrunk into collaboration during the occupation.

By contrast, the writers and artists of the Left Bank, united in the Comité des Écrivains resistance grouping, defied the iron grip of their conquerors. The Gestapo executed its leader, Jacques Décour in May 1942 but Édith Thomas, a novelist, took over the running of the organisation — whose members included such names as Albert Camus and Jean-Paul Sartre — from her flat in the 5th arrondissement. Many “disappeared”, the only evidence of which would typically be two chairs and German cigarette butts on the floor in an empty flat.

“There never were any traitors among us,” Édith Thomas recorded. Just as well. Secrecy was vital. In special danger as Jews, some young artists hid in plain sight — set designer Alexandre Trauner and composer Joseph Kosma worked under pseudonyms for the film director Marcel Carné.